freebsd-skq/sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c

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Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*-
* Copyright (c) 2003-2009 Silicon Graphics International Corp.
* Copyright (c) 2012 The FreeBSD Foundation
* Copyright (c) 2015 Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
* All rights reserved.
*
* Portions of this software were developed by Edward Tomasz Napierala
* under sponsorship from the FreeBSD Foundation.
*
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
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* including a substantially similar Disclaimer requirement for further
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Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
* $Id$
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
/*
* CAM Target Layer, a SCSI device emulation subsystem.
*
* Author: Ken Merry <ken@FreeBSD.org>
*/
#define _CTL_C
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/ctype.h>
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/kthread.h>
#include <sys/bio.h>
#include <sys/fcntl.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/condvar.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/conf.h>
#include <sys/ioccom.h>
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include <sys/sbuf.h>
#include <sys/smp.h>
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#include <sys/endian.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <vm/uma.h>
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#include <cam/cam.h>
#include <cam/scsi/scsi_all.h>
#include <cam/scsi/scsi_da.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_io.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_frontend.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_util.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_backend.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_ioctl.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_ha.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_private.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_debug.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_scsi_all.h>
#include <cam/ctl/ctl_error.h>
struct ctl_softc *control_softc = NULL;
/*
* Template mode pages.
*/
/*
* Note that these are default values only. The actual values will be
* filled in when the user does a mode sense.
*/
const static struct copan_debugconf_subpage debugconf_page_default = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
DBGCNF_PAGE_CODE | SMPH_SPF, /* page_code */
DBGCNF_SUBPAGE_CODE, /* subpage */
{(sizeof(struct copan_debugconf_subpage) - 4) >> 8,
(sizeof(struct copan_debugconf_subpage) - 4) >> 0}, /* page_length */
DBGCNF_VERSION, /* page_version */
{CTL_TIME_IO_DEFAULT_SECS>>8,
CTL_TIME_IO_DEFAULT_SECS>>0}, /* ctl_time_io_secs */
};
const static struct copan_debugconf_subpage debugconf_page_changeable = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
DBGCNF_PAGE_CODE | SMPH_SPF, /* page_code */
DBGCNF_SUBPAGE_CODE, /* subpage */
{(sizeof(struct copan_debugconf_subpage) - 4) >> 8,
(sizeof(struct copan_debugconf_subpage) - 4) >> 0}, /* page_length */
0, /* page_version */
{0xff,0xff}, /* ctl_time_io_secs */
};
const static struct scsi_da_rw_recovery_page rw_er_page_default = {
/*page_code*/SMS_RW_ERROR_RECOVERY_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_da_rw_recovery_page) - 2,
/*byte3*/SMS_RWER_AWRE|SMS_RWER_ARRE,
/*read_retry_count*/0,
/*correction_span*/0,
/*head_offset_count*/0,
/*data_strobe_offset_cnt*/0,
/*byte8*/SMS_RWER_LBPERE,
/*write_retry_count*/0,
/*reserved2*/0,
/*recovery_time_limit*/{0, 0},
};
const static struct scsi_da_rw_recovery_page rw_er_page_changeable = {
/*page_code*/SMS_RW_ERROR_RECOVERY_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_da_rw_recovery_page) - 2,
/*byte3*/0,
/*read_retry_count*/0,
/*correction_span*/0,
/*head_offset_count*/0,
/*data_strobe_offset_cnt*/0,
/*byte8*/0,
/*write_retry_count*/0,
/*reserved2*/0,
/*recovery_time_limit*/{0, 0},
};
const static struct scsi_format_page format_page_default = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*page_code*/SMS_FORMAT_DEVICE_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_format_page) - 2,
/*tracks_per_zone*/ {0, 0},
/*alt_sectors_per_zone*/ {0, 0},
/*alt_tracks_per_zone*/ {0, 0},
/*alt_tracks_per_lun*/ {0, 0},
/*sectors_per_track*/ {(CTL_DEFAULT_SECTORS_PER_TRACK >> 8) & 0xff,
CTL_DEFAULT_SECTORS_PER_TRACK & 0xff},
/*bytes_per_sector*/ {0, 0},
/*interleave*/ {0, 0},
/*track_skew*/ {0, 0},
/*cylinder_skew*/ {0, 0},
/*flags*/ SFP_HSEC,
/*reserved*/ {0, 0, 0}
};
const static struct scsi_format_page format_page_changeable = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*page_code*/SMS_FORMAT_DEVICE_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_format_page) - 2,
/*tracks_per_zone*/ {0, 0},
/*alt_sectors_per_zone*/ {0, 0},
/*alt_tracks_per_zone*/ {0, 0},
/*alt_tracks_per_lun*/ {0, 0},
/*sectors_per_track*/ {0, 0},
/*bytes_per_sector*/ {0, 0},
/*interleave*/ {0, 0},
/*track_skew*/ {0, 0},
/*cylinder_skew*/ {0, 0},
/*flags*/ 0,
/*reserved*/ {0, 0, 0}
};
const static struct scsi_rigid_disk_page rigid_disk_page_default = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*page_code*/SMS_RIGID_DISK_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_rigid_disk_page) - 2,
/*cylinders*/ {0, 0, 0},
/*heads*/ CTL_DEFAULT_HEADS,
/*start_write_precomp*/ {0, 0, 0},
/*start_reduced_current*/ {0, 0, 0},
/*step_rate*/ {0, 0},
/*landing_zone_cylinder*/ {0, 0, 0},
/*rpl*/ SRDP_RPL_DISABLED,
/*rotational_offset*/ 0,
/*reserved1*/ 0,
/*rotation_rate*/ {(CTL_DEFAULT_ROTATION_RATE >> 8) & 0xff,
CTL_DEFAULT_ROTATION_RATE & 0xff},
/*reserved2*/ {0, 0}
};
const static struct scsi_rigid_disk_page rigid_disk_page_changeable = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*page_code*/SMS_RIGID_DISK_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_rigid_disk_page) - 2,
/*cylinders*/ {0, 0, 0},
/*heads*/ 0,
/*start_write_precomp*/ {0, 0, 0},
/*start_reduced_current*/ {0, 0, 0},
/*step_rate*/ {0, 0},
/*landing_zone_cylinder*/ {0, 0, 0},
/*rpl*/ 0,
/*rotational_offset*/ 0,
/*reserved1*/ 0,
/*rotation_rate*/ {0, 0},
/*reserved2*/ {0, 0}
};
const static struct scsi_caching_page caching_page_default = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*page_code*/SMS_CACHING_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_caching_page) - 2,
/*flags1*/ SCP_DISC | SCP_WCE,
/*ret_priority*/ 0,
/*disable_pf_transfer_len*/ {0xff, 0xff},
/*min_prefetch*/ {0, 0},
/*max_prefetch*/ {0xff, 0xff},
/*max_pf_ceiling*/ {0xff, 0xff},
/*flags2*/ 0,
/*cache_segments*/ 0,
/*cache_seg_size*/ {0, 0},
/*reserved*/ 0,
/*non_cache_seg_size*/ {0, 0, 0}
};
const static struct scsi_caching_page caching_page_changeable = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*page_code*/SMS_CACHING_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_caching_page) - 2,
/*flags1*/ SCP_WCE | SCP_RCD,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*ret_priority*/ 0,
/*disable_pf_transfer_len*/ {0, 0},
/*min_prefetch*/ {0, 0},
/*max_prefetch*/ {0, 0},
/*max_pf_ceiling*/ {0, 0},
/*flags2*/ 0,
/*cache_segments*/ 0,
/*cache_seg_size*/ {0, 0},
/*reserved*/ 0,
/*non_cache_seg_size*/ {0, 0, 0}
};
const static struct scsi_control_page control_page_default = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*page_code*/SMS_CONTROL_MODE_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_control_page) - 2,
/*rlec*/0,
/*queue_flags*/SCP_QUEUE_ALG_RESTRICTED,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*eca_and_aen*/0,
/*flags4*/SCP_TAS,
/*aen_holdoff_period*/{0, 0},
/*busy_timeout_period*/{0, 0},
/*extended_selftest_completion_time*/{0, 0}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
};
const static struct scsi_control_page control_page_changeable = {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*page_code*/SMS_CONTROL_MODE_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_control_page) - 2,
/*rlec*/SCP_DSENSE,
/*queue_flags*/SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK,
/*eca_and_aen*/SCP_SWP,
/*flags4*/0,
/*aen_holdoff_period*/{0, 0},
/*busy_timeout_period*/{0, 0},
/*extended_selftest_completion_time*/{0, 0}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
};
#define CTL_CEM_LEN (sizeof(struct scsi_control_ext_page) - 4)
const static struct scsi_control_ext_page control_ext_page_default = {
/*page_code*/SMS_CONTROL_MODE_PAGE | SMPH_SPF,
/*subpage_code*/0x01,
/*page_length*/{CTL_CEM_LEN >> 8, CTL_CEM_LEN},
/*flags*/0,
/*prio*/0,
/*max_sense*/0
};
const static struct scsi_control_ext_page control_ext_page_changeable = {
/*page_code*/SMS_CONTROL_MODE_PAGE | SMPH_SPF,
/*subpage_code*/0x01,
/*page_length*/{CTL_CEM_LEN >> 8, CTL_CEM_LEN},
/*flags*/0,
/*prio*/0,
/*max_sense*/0
};
const static struct scsi_info_exceptions_page ie_page_default = {
/*page_code*/SMS_INFO_EXCEPTIONS_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_info_exceptions_page) - 2,
/*info_flags*/SIEP_FLAGS_DEXCPT,
/*mrie*/0,
/*interval_timer*/{0, 0, 0, 0},
/*report_count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}
};
const static struct scsi_info_exceptions_page ie_page_changeable = {
/*page_code*/SMS_INFO_EXCEPTIONS_PAGE,
/*page_length*/sizeof(struct scsi_info_exceptions_page) - 2,
/*info_flags*/0,
/*mrie*/0,
/*interval_timer*/{0, 0, 0, 0},
/*report_count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}
};
#define CTL_LBPM_LEN (sizeof(struct ctl_logical_block_provisioning_page) - 4)
const static struct ctl_logical_block_provisioning_page lbp_page_default = {{
/*page_code*/SMS_INFO_EXCEPTIONS_PAGE | SMPH_SPF,
/*subpage_code*/0x02,
/*page_length*/{CTL_LBPM_LEN >> 8, CTL_LBPM_LEN},
/*flags*/0,
/*reserved*/{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0},
/*descr*/{}},
{{/*flags*/0,
/*resource*/0x01,
/*reserved*/{0, 0},
/*count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}},
{/*flags*/0,
/*resource*/0x02,
/*reserved*/{0, 0},
/*count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}},
{/*flags*/0,
/*resource*/0xf1,
/*reserved*/{0, 0},
/*count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}},
{/*flags*/0,
/*resource*/0xf2,
/*reserved*/{0, 0},
/*count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}}
}
};
const static struct ctl_logical_block_provisioning_page lbp_page_changeable = {{
/*page_code*/SMS_INFO_EXCEPTIONS_PAGE | SMPH_SPF,
/*subpage_code*/0x02,
/*page_length*/{CTL_LBPM_LEN >> 8, CTL_LBPM_LEN},
/*flags*/0,
/*reserved*/{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0},
/*descr*/{}},
{{/*flags*/0,
/*resource*/0,
/*reserved*/{0, 0},
/*count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}},
{/*flags*/0,
/*resource*/0,
/*reserved*/{0, 0},
/*count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}},
{/*flags*/0,
/*resource*/0,
/*reserved*/{0, 0},
/*count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}},
{/*flags*/0,
/*resource*/0,
/*reserved*/{0, 0},
/*count*/{0, 0, 0, 0}}
}
};
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
SYSCTL_NODE(_kern_cam, OID_AUTO, ctl, CTLFLAG_RD, 0, "CAM Target Layer");
static int worker_threads = -1;
SYSCTL_INT(_kern_cam_ctl, OID_AUTO, worker_threads, CTLFLAG_RDTUN,
&worker_threads, 1, "Number of worker threads");
static int ctl_debug = CTL_DEBUG_NONE;
SYSCTL_INT(_kern_cam_ctl, OID_AUTO, debug, CTLFLAG_RWTUN,
&ctl_debug, 0, "Enabled debug flags");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Supported pages (0x00), Serial number (0x80), Device ID (0x83),
* Extended INQUIRY Data (0x86), Mode Page Policy (0x87),
* SCSI Ports (0x88), Third-party Copy (0x8F), Block limits (0xB0),
* Block Device Characteristics (0xB1) and Logical Block Provisioning (0xB2)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
#define SCSI_EVPD_NUM_SUPPORTED_PAGES 10
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static void ctl_isc_event_handler(ctl_ha_channel chanel, ctl_ha_event event,
int param);
static void ctl_copy_sense_data(union ctl_ha_msg *src, union ctl_io *dest);
static void ctl_copy_sense_data_back(union ctl_io *src, union ctl_ha_msg *dest);
static int ctl_init(void);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
void ctl_shutdown(void);
static int ctl_open(struct cdev *dev, int flags, int fmt, struct thread *td);
static int ctl_close(struct cdev *dev, int flags, int fmt, struct thread *td);
static int ctl_serialize_other_sc_cmd(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int ctl_ioctl_fill_ooa(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t *cur_fill_num,
struct ctl_ooa *ooa_hdr,
struct ctl_ooa_entry *kern_entries);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int ctl_ioctl(struct cdev *dev, u_long cmd, caddr_t addr, int flag,
struct thread *td);
static int ctl_alloc_lun(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc, struct ctl_lun *lun,
struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int ctl_free_lun(struct ctl_lun *lun);
static void ctl_create_lun(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun);
static struct ctl_port * ctl_io_port(struct ctl_io_hdr *io_hdr);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int ctl_do_mode_select(union ctl_io *io);
static int ctl_pro_preempt(struct ctl_softc *softc, struct ctl_lun *lun,
uint64_t res_key, uint64_t sa_res_key,
uint8_t type, uint32_t residx,
struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
struct scsi_per_res_out *cdb,
struct scsi_per_res_out_parms* param);
static void ctl_pro_preempt_other(struct ctl_lun *lun,
union ctl_ha_msg *msg);
static void ctl_hndl_per_res_out_on_other_sc(union ctl_ha_msg *msg);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_supported(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_serial(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_devid(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_eid(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_mpp(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_scsi_ports(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
int alloc_len);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_block_limits(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
int alloc_len);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_bdc(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len);
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd_lbp(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int ctl_inquiry_evpd(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio);
static int ctl_inquiry_std(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio);
static int ctl_get_lba_len(union ctl_io *io, uint64_t *lba, uint64_t *len);
static ctl_action ctl_extent_check(union ctl_io *io1, union ctl_io *io2,
bool seq);
static ctl_action ctl_extent_check_seq(union ctl_io *io1, union ctl_io *io2);
static ctl_action ctl_check_for_blockage(struct ctl_lun *lun,
union ctl_io *pending_io, union ctl_io *ooa_io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static ctl_action ctl_check_ooa(struct ctl_lun *lun, union ctl_io *pending_io,
union ctl_io *starting_io);
static int ctl_check_blocked(struct ctl_lun *lun);
static int ctl_scsiio_lun_check(struct ctl_lun *lun,
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio);
static void ctl_failover_lun(struct ctl_lun *lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int ctl_scsiio_precheck(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc,
struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio);
static int ctl_scsiio(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio);
static int ctl_bus_reset(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc, union ctl_io *io);
static int ctl_target_reset(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc, union ctl_io *io,
ctl_ua_type ua_type);
static int ctl_do_lun_reset(struct ctl_lun *lun, union ctl_io *io,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_ua_type ua_type);
static int ctl_lun_reset(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc, union ctl_io *io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int ctl_abort_task(union ctl_io *io);
static int ctl_abort_task_set(union ctl_io *io);
static int ctl_query_task(union ctl_io *io, int task_set);
static int ctl_i_t_nexus_reset(union ctl_io *io);
static int ctl_query_async_event(union ctl_io *io);
static void ctl_run_task(union ctl_io *io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#ifdef CTL_IO_DELAY
static void ctl_datamove_timer_wakeup(void *arg);
static void ctl_done_timer_wakeup(void *arg);
#endif /* CTL_IO_DELAY */
static void ctl_send_datamove_done(union ctl_io *io, int have_lock);
static void ctl_datamove_remote_write_cb(struct ctl_ha_dt_req *rq);
static int ctl_datamove_remote_dm_write_cb(union ctl_io *io);
static void ctl_datamove_remote_write(union ctl_io *io);
static int ctl_datamove_remote_dm_read_cb(union ctl_io *io);
static void ctl_datamove_remote_read_cb(struct ctl_ha_dt_req *rq);
static int ctl_datamove_remote_sgl_setup(union ctl_io *io);
static int ctl_datamove_remote_xfer(union ctl_io *io, unsigned command,
ctl_ha_dt_cb callback);
static void ctl_datamove_remote_read(union ctl_io *io);
static void ctl_datamove_remote(union ctl_io *io);
static int ctl_process_done(union ctl_io *io);
static void ctl_lun_thread(void *arg);
static void ctl_thresh_thread(void *arg);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static void ctl_work_thread(void *arg);
static void ctl_enqueue_incoming(union ctl_io *io);
static void ctl_enqueue_rtr(union ctl_io *io);
static void ctl_enqueue_done(union ctl_io *io);
static void ctl_enqueue_isc(union ctl_io *io);
static const struct ctl_cmd_entry *
ctl_get_cmd_entry(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int *sa);
static const struct ctl_cmd_entry *
ctl_validate_command(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio);
static int ctl_cmd_applicable(uint8_t lun_type,
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static uint64_t ctl_get_prkey(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t residx);
static void ctl_clr_prkey(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t residx);
static void ctl_alloc_prkey(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t residx);
static void ctl_set_prkey(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t residx, uint64_t key);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Load the serialization table. This isn't very pretty, but is probably
* the easiest way to do it.
*/
#include "ctl_ser_table.c"
/*
* We only need to define open, close and ioctl routines for this driver.
*/
static struct cdevsw ctl_cdevsw = {
.d_version = D_VERSION,
.d_flags = 0,
.d_open = ctl_open,
.d_close = ctl_close,
.d_ioctl = ctl_ioctl,
.d_name = "ctl",
};
MALLOC_DEFINE(M_CTL, "ctlmem", "Memory used for CTL");
static int ctl_module_event_handler(module_t, int /*modeventtype_t*/, void *);
static moduledata_t ctl_moduledata = {
"ctl",
ctl_module_event_handler,
NULL
};
DECLARE_MODULE(ctl, ctl_moduledata, SI_SUB_CONFIGURE, SI_ORDER_THIRD);
MODULE_VERSION(ctl, 1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static struct ctl_frontend ha_frontend =
{
.name = "ha",
};
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static void
ctl_isc_handler_finish_xfer(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc,
union ctl_ha_msg *msg_info)
{
struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio;
if (msg_info->hdr.original_sc == NULL) {
printf("%s: original_sc == NULL!\n", __func__);
/* XXX KDM now what? */
return;
}
ctsio = &msg_info->hdr.original_sc->scsiio;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
ctsio->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_FINISH_IO;
ctsio->io_hdr.status = msg_info->hdr.status;
ctsio->scsi_status = msg_info->scsi.scsi_status;
ctsio->sense_len = msg_info->scsi.sense_len;
ctsio->sense_residual = msg_info->scsi.sense_residual;
ctsio->residual = msg_info->scsi.residual;
memcpy(&ctsio->sense_data, &msg_info->scsi.sense_data,
msg_info->scsi.sense_len);
ctl_enqueue_isc((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static void
ctl_isc_handler_finish_ser_only(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc,
union ctl_ha_msg *msg_info)
{
struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio;
if (msg_info->hdr.serializing_sc == NULL) {
printf("%s: serializing_sc == NULL!\n", __func__);
/* XXX KDM now what? */
return;
}
ctsio = &msg_info->hdr.serializing_sc->scsiio;
ctsio->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_FINISH_IO;
ctl_enqueue_isc((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
void
ctl_isc_announce_lun(struct ctl_lun *lun)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
union ctl_ha_msg *msg;
struct ctl_ha_msg_lun_pr_key pr_key;
int i, k;
if (softc->ha_link != CTL_HA_LINK_ONLINE)
return;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
i = sizeof(msg->lun);
if (lun->lun_devid)
i += lun->lun_devid->len;
i += sizeof(pr_key) * lun->pr_key_count;
alloc:
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
msg = malloc(i, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
k = sizeof(msg->lun);
if (lun->lun_devid)
k += lun->lun_devid->len;
k += sizeof(pr_key) * lun->pr_key_count;
if (i < k) {
free(msg, M_CTL);
i = k;
goto alloc;
}
bzero(&msg->lun, sizeof(msg->lun));
msg->hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_LUN_SYNC;
msg->hdr.nexus.targ_lun = lun->lun;
msg->hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun = lun->lun;
msg->lun.flags = lun->flags;
msg->lun.pr_generation = lun->PRGeneration;
msg->lun.pr_res_idx = lun->pr_res_idx;
msg->lun.pr_res_type = lun->res_type;
msg->lun.pr_key_count = lun->pr_key_count;
i = 0;
if (lun->lun_devid) {
msg->lun.lun_devid_len = lun->lun_devid->len;
memcpy(&msg->lun.data[i], lun->lun_devid->data,
msg->lun.lun_devid_len);
i += msg->lun.lun_devid_len;
}
for (k = 0; k < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; k++) {
if ((pr_key.pr_key = ctl_get_prkey(lun, k)) == 0)
continue;
pr_key.pr_iid = k;
memcpy(&msg->lun.data[i], &pr_key, sizeof(pr_key));
i += sizeof(pr_key);
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg->port, sizeof(msg->port) + i,
M_WAITOK);
free(msg, M_CTL);
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) {
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
ctl_isc_announce_mode(lun, -1,
lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code & SMPH_PC_MASK,
lun->mode_pages.index[i].subpage);
}
}
}
void
ctl_isc_announce_port(struct ctl_port *port)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
union ctl_ha_msg *msg;
int i;
if (port->targ_port < softc->port_min ||
port->targ_port >= softc->port_max ||
softc->ha_link != CTL_HA_LINK_ONLINE)
return;
i = sizeof(msg->port) + strlen(port->port_name) + 1;
if (port->lun_map)
i += sizeof(uint32_t) * CTL_MAX_LUNS;
if (port->port_devid)
i += port->port_devid->len;
if (port->target_devid)
i += port->target_devid->len;
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if (port->init_devid)
i += port->init_devid->len;
msg = malloc(i, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
bzero(&msg->port, sizeof(msg->port));
msg->hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PORT_SYNC;
msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port = port->targ_port;
msg->port.port_type = port->port_type;
msg->port.physical_port = port->physical_port;
msg->port.virtual_port = port->virtual_port;
msg->port.status = port->status;
i = 0;
msg->port.name_len = sprintf(&msg->port.data[i],
"%d:%s", softc->ha_id, port->port_name) + 1;
i += msg->port.name_len;
if (port->lun_map) {
msg->port.lun_map_len = sizeof(uint32_t) * CTL_MAX_LUNS;
memcpy(&msg->port.data[i], port->lun_map,
msg->port.lun_map_len);
i += msg->port.lun_map_len;
}
if (port->port_devid) {
msg->port.port_devid_len = port->port_devid->len;
memcpy(&msg->port.data[i], port->port_devid->data,
msg->port.port_devid_len);
i += msg->port.port_devid_len;
}
if (port->target_devid) {
msg->port.target_devid_len = port->target_devid->len;
memcpy(&msg->port.data[i], port->target_devid->data,
msg->port.target_devid_len);
i += msg->port.target_devid_len;
}
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if (port->init_devid) {
msg->port.init_devid_len = port->init_devid->len;
memcpy(&msg->port.data[i], port->init_devid->data,
msg->port.init_devid_len);
i += msg->port.init_devid_len;
}
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg->port, sizeof(msg->port) + i,
M_WAITOK);
free(msg, M_CTL);
}
void
ctl_isc_announce_iid(struct ctl_port *port, int iid)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
union ctl_ha_msg *msg;
int i, l;
if (port->targ_port < softc->port_min ||
port->targ_port >= softc->port_max ||
softc->ha_link != CTL_HA_LINK_ONLINE)
return;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
i = sizeof(msg->iid);
l = 0;
if (port->wwpn_iid[iid].name)
l = strlen(port->wwpn_iid[iid].name) + 1;
i += l;
msg = malloc(i, M_CTL, M_NOWAIT);
if (msg == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
return;
}
bzero(&msg->iid, sizeof(msg->iid));
msg->hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_IID_SYNC;
msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port = port->targ_port;
msg->hdr.nexus.initid = iid;
msg->iid.in_use = port->wwpn_iid[iid].in_use;
msg->iid.name_len = l;
msg->iid.wwpn = port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn;
if (port->wwpn_iid[iid].name)
strlcpy(msg->iid.data, port->wwpn_iid[iid].name, l);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg->iid, i, M_NOWAIT);
free(msg, M_CTL);
}
void
ctl_isc_announce_mode(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t initidx,
uint8_t page, uint8_t subpage)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
union ctl_ha_msg msg;
int i;
if (softc->ha_link != CTL_HA_LINK_ONLINE)
return;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
if ((lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code & SMPH_PC_MASK) ==
page && lun->mode_pages.index[i].subpage == subpage)
break;
}
if (i == CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES)
return;
bzero(&msg.mode, sizeof(msg.mode));
msg.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_MODE_SYNC;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_port = initidx / CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT;
msg.hdr.nexus.initid = initidx % CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_lun = lun->lun;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun = lun->lun;
msg.mode.page_code = page;
msg.mode.subpage = subpage;
msg.mode.page_len = lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_len;
memcpy(msg.mode.data, lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_data,
msg.mode.page_len);
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg.mode, sizeof(msg.mode),
M_WAITOK);
}
static void
ctl_isc_ha_link_up(struct ctl_softc *softc)
{
struct ctl_port *port;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
union ctl_ha_msg msg;
int i;
/* Announce this node parameters to peer for validation. */
msg.login.msg_type = CTL_MSG_LOGIN;
msg.login.version = CTL_HA_VERSION;
msg.login.ha_mode = softc->ha_mode;
msg.login.ha_id = softc->ha_id;
msg.login.max_luns = CTL_MAX_LUNS;
msg.login.max_ports = CTL_MAX_PORTS;
msg.login.max_init_per_port = CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg.login, sizeof(msg.login),
M_WAITOK);
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
ctl_isc_announce_port(port);
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; i++) {
if (port->wwpn_iid[i].in_use)
ctl_isc_announce_iid(port, i);
}
}
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links)
ctl_isc_announce_lun(lun);
}
static void
ctl_isc_ha_link_down(struct ctl_softc *softc)
{
struct ctl_port *port;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
union ctl_io *io;
int i;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
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if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PEER_SC_PRIMARY) {
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PEER_SC_PRIMARY;
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, -1, CTL_UA_ASYM_ACC_CHANGE);
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io = ctl_alloc_io(softc->othersc_pool);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_zero_io(io);
io->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_FAILOVER;
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun = lun->lun;
ctl_enqueue_isc(io);
}
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
if (port->targ_port >= softc->port_min &&
port->targ_port < softc->port_max)
continue;
port->status &= ~CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; i++) {
port->wwpn_iid[i].in_use = 0;
free(port->wwpn_iid[i].name, M_CTL);
port->wwpn_iid[i].name = NULL;
}
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
}
static void
ctl_isc_ua(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_ha_msg *msg, int len)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t iid = ctl_get_initindex(&msg->hdr.nexus);
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mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (msg->hdr.nexus.targ_lun < CTL_MAX_LUNS &&
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(lun = softc->ctl_luns[msg->hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun]) != NULL) {
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (msg->ua.ua_type == CTL_UA_THIN_PROV_THRES &&
msg->ua.ua_set)
memcpy(lun->ua_tpt_info, msg->ua.ua_info, 8);
if (msg->ua.ua_all) {
if (msg->ua.ua_set)
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, iid, msg->ua.ua_type);
else
ctl_clr_ua_all(lun, iid, msg->ua.ua_type);
} else {
if (msg->ua.ua_set)
ctl_est_ua(lun, iid, msg->ua.ua_type);
else
ctl_clr_ua(lun, iid, msg->ua.ua_type);
}
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mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
} else
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
}
static void
ctl_isc_lun_sync(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_ha_msg *msg, int len)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_ha_msg_lun_pr_key pr_key;
int i, k;
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ctl_lun_flags oflags;
uint32_t targ_lun;
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targ_lun = msg->hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) ||
((lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) == NULL)) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
return;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
return;
}
i = (lun->lun_devid != NULL) ? lun->lun_devid->len : 0;
if (msg->lun.lun_devid_len != i || (i > 0 &&
memcmp(&msg->lun.data[0], lun->lun_devid->data, i) != 0)) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
printf("%s: Received conflicting HA LUN %d\n",
__func__, msg->hdr.nexus.targ_lun);
return;
} else {
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/* Record whether peer is primary. */
oflags = lun->flags;
if ((msg->lun.flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) &&
(msg->lun.flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) == 0)
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_PEER_SC_PRIMARY;
else
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PEER_SC_PRIMARY;
if (oflags != lun->flags)
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, -1, CTL_UA_ASYM_ACC_CHANGE);
/* If peer is primary and we are not -- use data */
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) == 0 &&
(lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PEER_SC_PRIMARY)) {
lun->PRGeneration = msg->lun.pr_generation;
lun->pr_res_idx = msg->lun.pr_res_idx;
lun->res_type = msg->lun.pr_res_type;
lun->pr_key_count = msg->lun.pr_key_count;
for (k = 0; k < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; k++)
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, k);
for (k = 0; k < msg->lun.pr_key_count; k++) {
memcpy(&pr_key, &msg->lun.data[i],
sizeof(pr_key));
ctl_alloc_prkey(lun, pr_key.pr_iid);
ctl_set_prkey(lun, pr_key.pr_iid,
pr_key.pr_key);
i += sizeof(pr_key);
}
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}
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mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("%s: Known LUN %d, peer is %s\n",
__func__, msg->hdr.nexus.targ_lun,
(msg->lun.flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) ?
"primary" : "secondary"));
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/* If we are primary but peer doesn't know -- notify */
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) &&
(msg->lun.flags & CTL_LUN_PEER_SC_PRIMARY) == 0)
ctl_isc_announce_lun(lun);
}
}
static void
ctl_isc_port_sync(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_ha_msg *msg, int len)
{
struct ctl_port *port;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int i, new;
port = softc->ctl_ports[msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port];
if (port == NULL) {
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("%s: New port %d\n", __func__,
msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port));
new = 1;
port = malloc(sizeof(*port), M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
port->frontend = &ha_frontend;
port->targ_port = msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port;
} else if (port->frontend == &ha_frontend) {
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("%s: Updated port %d\n", __func__,
msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port));
new = 0;
} else {
printf("%s: Received conflicting HA port %d\n",
__func__, msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port);
return;
}
port->port_type = msg->port.port_type;
port->physical_port = msg->port.physical_port;
port->virtual_port = msg->port.virtual_port;
port->status = msg->port.status;
i = 0;
free(port->port_name, M_CTL);
port->port_name = strndup(&msg->port.data[i], msg->port.name_len,
M_CTL);
i += msg->port.name_len;
if (msg->port.lun_map_len != 0) {
if (port->lun_map == NULL)
port->lun_map = malloc(sizeof(uint32_t) * CTL_MAX_LUNS,
M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
memcpy(port->lun_map, &msg->port.data[i],
sizeof(uint32_t) * CTL_MAX_LUNS);
i += msg->port.lun_map_len;
} else {
free(port->lun_map, M_CTL);
port->lun_map = NULL;
}
if (msg->port.port_devid_len != 0) {
if (port->port_devid == NULL ||
port->port_devid->len != msg->port.port_devid_len) {
free(port->port_devid, M_CTL);
port->port_devid = malloc(sizeof(struct ctl_devid) +
msg->port.port_devid_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
}
memcpy(port->port_devid->data, &msg->port.data[i],
msg->port.port_devid_len);
port->port_devid->len = msg->port.port_devid_len;
i += msg->port.port_devid_len;
} else {
free(port->port_devid, M_CTL);
port->port_devid = NULL;
}
if (msg->port.target_devid_len != 0) {
if (port->target_devid == NULL ||
port->target_devid->len != msg->port.target_devid_len) {
free(port->target_devid, M_CTL);
port->target_devid = malloc(sizeof(struct ctl_devid) +
msg->port.target_devid_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
}
memcpy(port->target_devid->data, &msg->port.data[i],
msg->port.target_devid_len);
port->target_devid->len = msg->port.target_devid_len;
i += msg->port.target_devid_len;
} else {
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free(port->target_devid, M_CTL);
port->target_devid = NULL;
}
if (msg->port.init_devid_len != 0) {
if (port->init_devid == NULL ||
port->init_devid->len != msg->port.init_devid_len) {
free(port->init_devid, M_CTL);
port->init_devid = malloc(sizeof(struct ctl_devid) +
msg->port.init_devid_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
}
memcpy(port->init_devid->data, &msg->port.data[i],
msg->port.init_devid_len);
port->init_devid->len = msg->port.init_devid_len;
i += msg->port.init_devid_len;
} else {
free(port->init_devid, M_CTL);
port->init_devid = NULL;
}
if (new) {
if (ctl_port_register(port) != 0) {
printf("%s: ctl_port_register() failed with error\n",
__func__);
}
}
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
if (ctl_lun_map_to_port(port, lun->lun) >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, -1, CTL_UA_INQ_CHANGE);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
}
static void
ctl_isc_iid_sync(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_ha_msg *msg, int len)
{
struct ctl_port *port;
int iid;
port = softc->ctl_ports[msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port];
if (port == NULL) {
printf("%s: Received IID for unknown port %d\n",
__func__, msg->hdr.nexus.targ_port);
return;
}
iid = msg->hdr.nexus.initid;
port->wwpn_iid[iid].in_use = msg->iid.in_use;
port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn = msg->iid.wwpn;
free(port->wwpn_iid[iid].name, M_CTL);
if (msg->iid.name_len) {
port->wwpn_iid[iid].name = strndup(&msg->iid.data[0],
msg->iid.name_len, M_CTL);
} else
port->wwpn_iid[iid].name = NULL;
}
static void
ctl_isc_login(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_ha_msg *msg, int len)
{
if (msg->login.version != CTL_HA_VERSION) {
printf("CTL HA peers have different versions %d != %d\n",
msg->login.version, CTL_HA_VERSION);
ctl_ha_msg_abort(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL);
return;
}
if (msg->login.ha_mode != softc->ha_mode) {
printf("CTL HA peers have different ha_mode %d != %d\n",
msg->login.ha_mode, softc->ha_mode);
ctl_ha_msg_abort(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL);
return;
}
if (msg->login.ha_id == softc->ha_id) {
printf("CTL HA peers have same ha_id %d\n", msg->login.ha_id);
ctl_ha_msg_abort(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL);
return;
}
if (msg->login.max_luns != CTL_MAX_LUNS ||
msg->login.max_ports != CTL_MAX_PORTS ||
msg->login.max_init_per_port != CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT) {
printf("CTL HA peers have different limits\n");
ctl_ha_msg_abort(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL);
return;
}
}
static void
ctl_isc_mode_sync(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_ha_msg *msg, int len)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int i;
uint32_t initidx, targ_lun;
targ_lun = msg->hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) ||
((lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) == NULL)) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
return;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
return;
}
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
if ((lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code & SMPH_PC_MASK) ==
msg->mode.page_code &&
lun->mode_pages.index[i].subpage == msg->mode.subpage)
break;
}
if (i == CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
return;
}
memcpy(lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_data, msg->mode.data,
lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_len);
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&msg->hdr.nexus);
if (initidx != -1)
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, initidx, CTL_UA_MODE_CHANGE);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* ISC (Inter Shelf Communication) event handler. Events from the HA
* subsystem come in here.
*/
static void
ctl_isc_event_handler(ctl_ha_channel channel, ctl_ha_event event, int param)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
union ctl_io *io;
struct ctl_prio *presio;
ctl_ha_status isc_status;
softc = control_softc;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("CTL: Isc Msg event %d\n", event));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (event == CTL_HA_EVT_MSG_RECV) {
union ctl_ha_msg *msg, msgbuf;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (param > sizeof(msgbuf))
msg = malloc(param, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
else
msg = &msgbuf;
isc_status = ctl_ha_msg_recv(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, msg, param,
M_WAITOK);
if (isc_status != CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS) {
printf("%s: Error receiving message: %d\n",
__func__, isc_status);
if (msg != &msgbuf)
free(msg, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return;
}
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("CTL: msg_type %d\n", msg->msg_type));
switch (msg->hdr.msg_type) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case CTL_MSG_SERIALIZE:
io = ctl_alloc_io(softc->othersc_pool);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_zero_io(io);
// populate ctsio from msg
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.io_type = CTL_IO_SCSI;
io->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_SERIALIZE;
io->io_hdr.original_sc = msg->hdr.original_sc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC |
CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
/*
* If we're in serialization-only mode, we don't
* want to go through full done processing. Thus
* the COPY flag.
*
* XXX KDM add another flag that is more specific.
*/
if (softc->ha_mode != CTL_HA_MODE_XFER)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_INT_COPY;
io->io_hdr.nexus = msg->hdr.nexus;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
printf("port %u, iid %u, lun %u\n",
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port,
io->io_hdr.nexus.initid,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_lun);
#endif
io->scsiio.tag_num = msg->scsi.tag_num;
io->scsiio.tag_type = msg->scsi.tag_type;
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
io->io_hdr.start_time = time_uptime;
getbintime(&io->io_hdr.start_bt);
#endif /* CTL_TIME_IO */
io->scsiio.cdb_len = msg->scsi.cdb_len;
memcpy(io->scsiio.cdb, msg->scsi.cdb,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_MAX_CDBLEN);
if (softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER) {
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(&io->scsiio, NULL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK;
io->io_hdr.flags |=
entry->flags & CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK;
}
ctl_enqueue_isc(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
/* Performed on the Originating SC, XFER mode only */
case CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE: {
struct ctl_sg_entry *sgl;
int i, j;
io = msg->hdr.original_sc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io == NULL) {
printf("%s: original_sc == NULL!\n", __func__);
/* XXX KDM do something here */
break;
}
io->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE;
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
/*
* Keep track of this, we need to send it back over
* when the datamove is complete.
*/
io->io_hdr.serializing_sc = msg->hdr.serializing_sc;
if (msg->hdr.status == CTL_SUCCESS)
io->io_hdr.status = msg->hdr.status;
if (msg->dt.sg_sequence == 0) {
i = msg->dt.kern_sg_entries +
msg->dt.kern_data_len /
CTL_HA_DATAMOVE_SEGMENT + 1;
sgl = malloc(sizeof(*sgl) * i, M_CTL,
M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
io->io_hdr.remote_sglist = sgl;
io->io_hdr.local_sglist =
&sgl[msg->dt.kern_sg_entries];
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr = (uint8_t *)sgl;
io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries =
msg->dt.kern_sg_entries;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->scsiio.rem_sg_entries =
msg->dt.kern_sg_entries;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->scsiio.kern_data_len =
msg->dt.kern_data_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->scsiio.kern_total_len =
msg->dt.kern_total_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->scsiio.kern_data_resid =
msg->dt.kern_data_resid;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->scsiio.kern_rel_offset =
msg->dt.kern_rel_offset;
io->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_BUS_ADDR;
io->io_hdr.flags |= msg->dt.flags &
CTL_FLAG_BUS_ADDR;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else
sgl = (struct ctl_sg_entry *)
io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr;
for (i = msg->dt.sent_sg_entries, j = 0;
i < (msg->dt.sent_sg_entries +
msg->dt.cur_sg_entries); i++, j++) {
sgl[i].addr = msg->dt.sg_list[j].addr;
sgl[i].len = msg->dt.sg_list[j].len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
printf("%s: DATAMOVE: %p,%lu j=%d, i=%d\n",
__func__, sgl[i].addr, sgl[i].len, j, i);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
}
/*
* If this is the last piece of the I/O, we've got
* the full S/G list. Queue processing in the thread.
* Otherwise wait for the next piece.
*/
if (msg->dt.sg_last != 0)
ctl_enqueue_isc(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
/* Performed on the Serializing (primary) SC, XFER mode only */
case CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE_DONE: {
if (msg->hdr.serializing_sc == NULL) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
printf("%s: serializing_sc == NULL!\n",
__func__);
/* XXX KDM now what? */
break;
}
/*
* We grab the sense information here in case
* there was a failure, so we can return status
* back to the initiator.
*/
io = msg->hdr.serializing_sc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE_DONE;
io->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_DMA_INPROG;
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
io->io_hdr.port_status = msg->scsi.fetd_status;
io->scsiio.residual = msg->scsi.residual;
if (msg->hdr.status != CTL_STATUS_NONE) {
io->io_hdr.status = msg->hdr.status;
io->scsiio.scsi_status = msg->scsi.scsi_status;
io->scsiio.sense_len = msg->scsi.sense_len;
io->scsiio.sense_residual =msg->scsi.sense_residual;
memcpy(&io->scsiio.sense_data,
&msg->scsi.sense_data,
msg->scsi.sense_len);
if (msg->hdr.status == CTL_SUCCESS)
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_STATUS_SENT;
}
ctl_enqueue_isc(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
/* Preformed on Originating SC, SER_ONLY mode */
case CTL_MSG_R2R:
io = msg->hdr.original_sc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io == NULL) {
printf("%s: original_sc == NULL!\n",
__func__);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_R2R;
io->io_hdr.serializing_sc = msg->hdr.serializing_sc;
ctl_enqueue_isc(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
/*
* Performed on Serializing(i.e. primary SC) SC in SER_ONLY
* mode.
* Performed on the Originating (i.e. secondary) SC in XFER
* mode
*/
case CTL_MSG_FINISH_IO:
if (softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER)
ctl_isc_handler_finish_xfer(softc, msg);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
else
ctl_isc_handler_finish_ser_only(softc, msg);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
/* Preformed on Originating SC */
case CTL_MSG_BAD_JUJU:
io = msg->hdr.original_sc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io == NULL) {
printf("%s: Bad JUJU!, original_sc is NULL!\n",
__func__);
break;
}
ctl_copy_sense_data(msg, io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* IO should have already been cleaned up on other
* SC so clear this flag so we won't send a message
* back to finish the IO there.
*/
io->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_SENT_2OTHER_SC;
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
/* io = msg->hdr.serializing_sc; */
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_BAD_JUJU;
ctl_enqueue_isc(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
/* Handle resets sent from the other side */
case CTL_MSG_MANAGE_TASKS: {
struct ctl_taskio *taskio;
taskio = (struct ctl_taskio *)ctl_alloc_io(
softc->othersc_pool);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_zero_io((union ctl_io *)taskio);
taskio->io_hdr.io_type = CTL_IO_TASK;
taskio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC;
taskio->io_hdr.nexus = msg->hdr.nexus;
taskio->task_action = msg->task.task_action;
taskio->tag_num = msg->task.tag_num;
taskio->tag_type = msg->task.tag_type;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
taskio->io_hdr.start_time = time_uptime;
getbintime(&taskio->io_hdr.start_bt);
#endif /* CTL_TIME_IO */
ctl_run_task((union ctl_io *)taskio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
/* Persistent Reserve action which needs attention */
case CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION:
presio = (struct ctl_prio *)ctl_alloc_io(
softc->othersc_pool);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_zero_io((union ctl_io *)presio);
presio->io_hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
presio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC;
presio->io_hdr.nexus = msg->hdr.nexus;
presio->pr_msg = msg->pr;
ctl_enqueue_isc((union ctl_io *)presio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_MSG_UA:
ctl_isc_ua(softc, msg, param);
break;
case CTL_MSG_PORT_SYNC:
ctl_isc_port_sync(softc, msg, param);
break;
case CTL_MSG_LUN_SYNC:
ctl_isc_lun_sync(softc, msg, param);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_MSG_IID_SYNC:
ctl_isc_iid_sync(softc, msg, param);
break;
case CTL_MSG_LOGIN:
ctl_isc_login(softc, msg, param);
break;
case CTL_MSG_MODE_SYNC:
ctl_isc_mode_sync(softc, msg, param);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
default:
printf("Received HA message of unknown type %d\n",
msg->hdr.msg_type);
ctl_ha_msg_abort(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if (msg != &msgbuf)
free(msg, M_CTL);
} else if (event == CTL_HA_EVT_LINK_CHANGE) {
printf("CTL: HA link status changed from %d to %d\n",
softc->ha_link, param);
if (param == softc->ha_link)
return;
if (softc->ha_link == CTL_HA_LINK_ONLINE) {
softc->ha_link = param;
ctl_isc_ha_link_down(softc);
} else {
softc->ha_link = param;
if (softc->ha_link == CTL_HA_LINK_ONLINE)
ctl_isc_ha_link_up(softc);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
return;
} else {
printf("ctl_isc_event_handler: Unknown event %d\n", event);
return;
}
}
static void
ctl_copy_sense_data(union ctl_ha_msg *src, union ctl_io *dest)
{
memcpy(&dest->scsiio.sense_data, &src->scsi.sense_data,
src->scsi.sense_len);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
dest->scsiio.scsi_status = src->scsi.scsi_status;
dest->scsiio.sense_len = src->scsi.sense_len;
dest->io_hdr.status = src->hdr.status;
}
static void
ctl_copy_sense_data_back(union ctl_io *src, union ctl_ha_msg *dest)
{
memcpy(&dest->scsi.sense_data, &src->scsiio.sense_data,
src->scsiio.sense_len);
dest->scsi.scsi_status = src->scsiio.scsi_status;
dest->scsi.sense_len = src->scsiio.sense_len;
dest->hdr.status = src->io_hdr.status;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
void
ctl_est_ua(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t initidx, ctl_ua_type ua)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
ctl_ua_type *pu;
if (initidx < softc->init_min || initidx >= softc->init_max)
return;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
pu = lun->pending_ua[initidx / CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT];
if (pu == NULL)
return;
pu[initidx % CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT] |= ua;
}
void
ctl_est_ua_port(struct ctl_lun *lun, int port, uint32_t except, ctl_ua_type ua)
{
int i;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
if (lun->pending_ua[port] == NULL)
return;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; i++) {
if (port * CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT + i == except)
continue;
lun->pending_ua[port][i] |= ua;
}
}
void
ctl_est_ua_all(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t except, ctl_ua_type ua)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
int i;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
for (i = softc->port_min; i < softc->port_max; i++)
ctl_est_ua_port(lun, i, except, ua);
}
void
ctl_clr_ua(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t initidx, ctl_ua_type ua)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
ctl_ua_type *pu;
if (initidx < softc->init_min || initidx >= softc->init_max)
return;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
pu = lun->pending_ua[initidx / CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT];
if (pu == NULL)
return;
pu[initidx % CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT] &= ~ua;
}
void
ctl_clr_ua_all(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t except, ctl_ua_type ua)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
int i, j;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
for (i = softc->port_min; i < softc->port_max; i++) {
if (lun->pending_ua[i] == NULL)
continue;
for (j = 0; j < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; j++) {
if (i * CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT + j == except)
continue;
lun->pending_ua[i][j] &= ~ua;
}
}
}
void
2015-09-03 12:56:57 +00:00
ctl_clr_ua_allluns(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc, uint32_t initidx,
ctl_ua_type ua_type)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
mtx_assert(&ctl_softc->ctl_lock, MA_OWNED);
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &ctl_softc->lun_list, links) {
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_clr_ua(lun, initidx, ua_type);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
}
}
static int
ctl_ha_role_sysctl(SYSCTL_HANDLER_ARGS)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = (struct ctl_softc *)arg1;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_lun_req ireq;
int error, value;
value = (softc->flags & CTL_FLAG_ACTIVE_SHELF) ? 0 : 1;
error = sysctl_handle_int(oidp, &value, 0, req);
if ((error != 0) || (req->newptr == NULL))
return (error);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (value == 0)
softc->flags |= CTL_FLAG_ACTIVE_SHELF;
else
softc->flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_ACTIVE_SHELF;
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
bzero(&ireq, sizeof(ireq));
ireq.reqtype = CTL_LUNREQ_MODIFY;
ireq.reqdata.modify.lun_id = lun->lun;
lun->backend->ioctl(NULL, CTL_LUN_REQ, (caddr_t)&ireq, 0,
curthread);
if (ireq.status != CTL_LUN_OK) {
printf("%s: CTL_LUNREQ_MODIFY returned %d '%s'\n",
__func__, ireq.status, ireq.error_str);
}
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
return (0);
}
static int
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_init(void)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
void *other_pool;
int i, error, retval;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = 0;
control_softc = malloc(sizeof(*control_softc), M_DEVBUF,
M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
softc->dev = make_dev(&ctl_cdevsw, 0, UID_ROOT, GID_OPERATOR, 0600,
"cam/ctl");
softc->dev->si_drv1 = softc;
sysctl_ctx_init(&softc->sysctl_ctx);
softc->sysctl_tree = SYSCTL_ADD_NODE(&softc->sysctl_ctx,
SYSCTL_STATIC_CHILDREN(_kern_cam), OID_AUTO, "ctl",
CTLFLAG_RD, 0, "CAM Target Layer");
if (softc->sysctl_tree == NULL) {
printf("%s: unable to allocate sysctl tree\n", __func__);
destroy_dev(softc->dev);
free(control_softc, M_DEVBUF);
control_softc = NULL;
return (ENOMEM);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_init(&softc->ctl_lock, "CTL mutex", NULL, MTX_DEF);
softc->io_zone = uma_zcreate("CTL IO", sizeof(union ctl_io),
NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, UMA_ALIGN_PTR, 0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc->open_count = 0;
/*
* Default to actually sending a SYNCHRONIZE CACHE command down to
* the drive.
*/
softc->flags = CTL_FLAG_REAL_SYNC;
SYSCTL_ADD_INT(&softc->sysctl_ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(softc->sysctl_tree),
OID_AUTO, "ha_mode", CTLFLAG_RDTUN, (int *)&softc->ha_mode, 0,
"HA mode (0 - act/stby, 1 - serialize only, 2 - xfer)");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* In Copan's HA scheme, the "master" and "slave" roles are
* figured out through the slot the controller is in. Although it
* is an active/active system, someone has to be in charge.
*/
SYSCTL_ADD_INT(&softc->sysctl_ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(softc->sysctl_tree),
OID_AUTO, "ha_id", CTLFLAG_RDTUN, &softc->ha_id, 0,
"HA head ID (0 - no HA)");
if (softc->ha_id == 0 || softc->ha_id > NUM_TARGET_PORT_GROUPS) {
softc->flags |= CTL_FLAG_ACTIVE_SHELF;
softc->is_single = 1;
softc->port_cnt = CTL_MAX_PORTS;
softc->port_min = 0;
} else {
softc->port_cnt = CTL_MAX_PORTS / NUM_TARGET_PORT_GROUPS;
softc->port_min = (softc->ha_id - 1) * softc->port_cnt;
}
softc->port_max = softc->port_min + softc->port_cnt;
softc->init_min = softc->port_min * CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT;
softc->init_max = softc->port_max * CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT;
SYSCTL_ADD_INT(&softc->sysctl_ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(softc->sysctl_tree),
OID_AUTO, "ha_link", CTLFLAG_RD, (int *)&softc->ha_link, 0,
"HA link state (0 - offline, 1 - unknown, 2 - online)");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
STAILQ_INIT(&softc->lun_list);
STAILQ_INIT(&softc->pending_lun_queue);
STAILQ_INIT(&softc->fe_list);
STAILQ_INIT(&softc->port_list);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
STAILQ_INIT(&softc->be_list);
ctl_tpc_init(softc);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (ctl_pool_create(softc, "othersc", CTL_POOL_ENTRIES_OTHER_SC,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
&other_pool) != 0)
{
printf("ctl: can't allocate %d entry other SC pool, "
"exiting\n", CTL_POOL_ENTRIES_OTHER_SC);
return (ENOMEM);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
softc->othersc_pool = other_pool;
if (worker_threads <= 0)
worker_threads = max(1, mp_ncpus / 4);
if (worker_threads > CTL_MAX_THREADS)
worker_threads = CTL_MAX_THREADS;
for (i = 0; i < worker_threads; i++) {
struct ctl_thread *thr = &softc->threads[i];
mtx_init(&thr->queue_lock, "CTL queue mutex", NULL, MTX_DEF);
thr->ctl_softc = softc;
STAILQ_INIT(&thr->incoming_queue);
STAILQ_INIT(&thr->rtr_queue);
STAILQ_INIT(&thr->done_queue);
STAILQ_INIT(&thr->isc_queue);
error = kproc_kthread_add(ctl_work_thread, thr,
&softc->ctl_proc, &thr->thread, 0, 0, "ctl", "work%d", i);
if (error != 0) {
printf("error creating CTL work thread!\n");
ctl_pool_free(other_pool);
return (error);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
error = kproc_kthread_add(ctl_lun_thread, softc,
&softc->ctl_proc, NULL, 0, 0, "ctl", "lun");
if (error != 0) {
printf("error creating CTL lun thread!\n");
ctl_pool_free(other_pool);
return (error);
}
error = kproc_kthread_add(ctl_thresh_thread, softc,
&softc->ctl_proc, NULL, 0, 0, "ctl", "thresh");
if (error != 0) {
printf("error creating CTL threshold thread!\n");
ctl_pool_free(other_pool);
return (error);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
SYSCTL_ADD_PROC(&softc->sysctl_ctx,SYSCTL_CHILDREN(softc->sysctl_tree),
OID_AUTO, "ha_role", CTLTYPE_INT | CTLFLAG_RWTUN,
softc, 0, ctl_ha_role_sysctl, "I", "HA role for this head");
if (softc->is_single == 0) {
ctl_frontend_register(&ha_frontend);
if (ctl_ha_msg_init(softc) != CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS) {
printf("ctl_init: ctl_ha_msg_init failed.\n");
softc->is_single = 1;
} else
if (ctl_ha_msg_register(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, ctl_isc_event_handler)
!= CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS) {
printf("ctl_init: ctl_ha_msg_register failed.\n");
softc->is_single = 1;
}
}
return (0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
void
ctl_shutdown(void)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
struct ctl_lun *lun, *next_lun;
softc = (struct ctl_softc *)control_softc;
if (softc->is_single == 0) {
ctl_ha_msg_shutdown(softc);
if (ctl_ha_msg_deregister(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL)
!= CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS)
printf("%s: ctl_ha_msg_deregister failed.\n", __func__);
if (ctl_ha_msg_destroy(softc) != CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS)
printf("%s: ctl_ha_msg_destroy failed.\n", __func__);
ctl_frontend_deregister(&ha_frontend);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
/*
* Free up each LUN.
*/
for (lun = STAILQ_FIRST(&softc->lun_list); lun != NULL; lun = next_lun){
next_lun = STAILQ_NEXT(lun, links);
ctl_free_lun(lun);
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
ctl_shutdown_thread(softc->work_thread);
mtx_destroy(&softc->queue_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
ctl_tpc_shutdown(softc);
uma_zdestroy(softc->io_zone);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_destroy(&softc->ctl_lock);
destroy_dev(softc->dev);
sysctl_ctx_free(&softc->sysctl_ctx);
free(control_softc, M_DEVBUF);
control_softc = NULL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static int
ctl_module_event_handler(module_t mod, int what, void *arg)
{
switch (what) {
case MOD_LOAD:
return (ctl_init());
case MOD_UNLOAD:
return (EBUSY);
default:
return (EOPNOTSUPP);
}
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* XXX KDM should we do some access checks here? Bump a reference count to
* prevent a CTL module from being unloaded while someone has it open?
*/
static int
ctl_open(struct cdev *dev, int flags, int fmt, struct thread *td)
{
return (0);
}
static int
ctl_close(struct cdev *dev, int flags, int fmt, struct thread *td)
{
return (0);
}
/*
* Remove an initiator by port number and initiator ID.
* Returns 0 for success, -1 for failure.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
int
ctl_remove_initiator(struct ctl_port *port, int iid)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_assert(&softc->ctl_lock, MA_NOTOWNED);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (iid > CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT) {
printf("%s: initiator ID %u > maximun %u!\n",
__func__, iid, CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT);
return (-1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
port->wwpn_iid[iid].in_use--;
port->wwpn_iid[iid].last_use = time_uptime;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_isc_announce_iid(port, iid);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
/*
* Add an initiator to the initiator map.
* Returns iid for success, < 0 for failure.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
int
ctl_add_initiator(struct ctl_port *port, int iid, uint64_t wwpn, char *name)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
time_t best_time;
int i, best;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_assert(&softc->ctl_lock, MA_NOTOWNED);
if (iid >= CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT) {
printf("%s: WWPN %#jx initiator ID %u > maximum %u!\n",
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
__func__, wwpn, iid, CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT);
free(name, M_CTL);
return (-1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (iid < 0 && (wwpn != 0 || name != NULL)) {
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; i++) {
if (wwpn != 0 && wwpn == port->wwpn_iid[i].wwpn) {
iid = i;
break;
}
if (name != NULL && port->wwpn_iid[i].name != NULL &&
strcmp(name, port->wwpn_iid[i].name) == 0) {
iid = i;
break;
}
}
}
if (iid < 0) {
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; i++) {
if (port->wwpn_iid[i].in_use == 0 &&
port->wwpn_iid[i].wwpn == 0 &&
port->wwpn_iid[i].name == NULL) {
iid = i;
break;
}
}
}
if (iid < 0) {
best = -1;
best_time = INT32_MAX;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; i++) {
if (port->wwpn_iid[i].in_use == 0) {
if (port->wwpn_iid[i].last_use < best_time) {
best = i;
best_time = port->wwpn_iid[i].last_use;
}
}
}
iid = best;
}
if (iid < 0) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
free(name, M_CTL);
return (-2);
}
if (port->wwpn_iid[iid].in_use > 0 && (wwpn != 0 || name != NULL)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* This is not an error yet.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
if (wwpn != 0 && wwpn == port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn) {
#if 0
printf("%s: port %d iid %u WWPN %#jx arrived"
" again\n", __func__, port->targ_port,
iid, (uintmax_t)wwpn);
#endif
goto take;
}
if (name != NULL && port->wwpn_iid[iid].name != NULL &&
strcmp(name, port->wwpn_iid[iid].name) == 0) {
#if 0
printf("%s: port %d iid %u name '%s' arrived"
" again\n", __func__, port->targ_port,
iid, name);
#endif
goto take;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* This is an error, but what do we do about it? The
* driver is telling us we have a new WWPN for this
* initiator ID, so we pretty much need to use it.
*/
printf("%s: port %d iid %u WWPN %#jx '%s' arrived,"
" but WWPN %#jx '%s' is still at that address\n",
__func__, port->targ_port, iid, wwpn, name,
(uintmax_t)port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn,
port->wwpn_iid[iid].name);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* XXX KDM clear have_ca and ua_pending on each LUN for
* this initiator.
*/
}
take:
free(port->wwpn_iid[iid].name, M_CTL);
port->wwpn_iid[iid].name = name;
port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn = wwpn;
port->wwpn_iid[iid].in_use++;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_isc_announce_iid(port, iid);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (iid);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static int
ctl_create_iid(struct ctl_port *port, int iid, uint8_t *buf)
{
int len;
switch (port->port_type) {
case CTL_PORT_FC:
{
struct scsi_transportid_fcp *id =
(struct scsi_transportid_fcp *)buf;
if (port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn == 0)
return (0);
memset(id, 0, sizeof(*id));
id->format_protocol = SCSI_PROTO_FC;
scsi_u64to8b(port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn, id->n_port_name);
return (sizeof(*id));
}
case CTL_PORT_ISCSI:
{
struct scsi_transportid_iscsi_port *id =
(struct scsi_transportid_iscsi_port *)buf;
if (port->wwpn_iid[iid].name == NULL)
return (0);
memset(id, 0, 256);
id->format_protocol = SCSI_TRN_ISCSI_FORMAT_PORT |
SCSI_PROTO_ISCSI;
len = strlcpy(id->iscsi_name, port->wwpn_iid[iid].name, 252) + 1;
len = roundup2(min(len, 252), 4);
scsi_ulto2b(len, id->additional_length);
return (sizeof(*id) + len);
}
case CTL_PORT_SAS:
{
struct scsi_transportid_sas *id =
(struct scsi_transportid_sas *)buf;
if (port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn == 0)
return (0);
memset(id, 0, sizeof(*id));
id->format_protocol = SCSI_PROTO_SAS;
scsi_u64to8b(port->wwpn_iid[iid].wwpn, id->sas_address);
return (sizeof(*id));
}
default:
{
struct scsi_transportid_spi *id =
(struct scsi_transportid_spi *)buf;
memset(id, 0, sizeof(*id));
id->format_protocol = SCSI_PROTO_SPI;
scsi_ulto2b(iid, id->scsi_addr);
scsi_ulto2b(port->targ_port, id->rel_trgt_port_id);
return (sizeof(*id));
}
}
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Serialize a command that went down the "wrong" side, and so was sent to
* this controller for execution. The logic is a little different than the
* standard case in ctl_scsiio_precheck(). Errors in this case need to get
* sent back to the other side, but in the success case, we execute the
* command on this side (XFER mode) or tell the other side to execute it
* (SER_ONLY mode).
*/
static int
ctl_serialize_other_sc_cmd(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
union ctl_ha_msg msg_info;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int retval = 0;
uint32_t targ_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
targ_lun = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun < CTL_MAX_LUNS) &&
((lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) != NULL)) {
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
/*
* If the LUN is invalid, pretend that it doesn't exist.
* It will go away as soon as all pending I/O has been
* completed.
*/
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
lun = NULL;
}
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
} else {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
lun = NULL;
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
}
if (lun == NULL) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* The other node would not send this request to us unless
* received announce that we are primary node for this LUN.
* If this LUN does not exist now, it is probably result of
* a race, so respond to initiator in the most opaque way.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
ctl_set_busy(ctsio);
ctl_copy_sense_data_back((union ctl_io *)ctsio, &msg_info);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = ctsio->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_BAD_JUJU;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.scsi), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return(1);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(ctsio, NULL);
if (ctl_scsiio_lun_check(lun, entry, ctsio) != 0) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_copy_sense_data_back((union ctl_io *)ctsio, &msg_info);
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = ctsio->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_BAD_JUJU;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.scsi), M_WAITOK);
return(1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr = lun;
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_BACKEND_LUN].ptr = lun->be_lun;
/*
* Every I/O goes into the OOA queue for a
* particular LUN, and stays there until completion.
*/
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
if (TAILQ_EMPTY(&lun->ooa_queue))
lun->idle_time += getsbinuptime() - lun->last_busy;
#endif
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&lun->ooa_queue, &ctsio->io_hdr, ooa_links);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (ctl_check_ooa(lun, (union ctl_io *)ctsio,
(union ctl_io *)TAILQ_PREV(&ctsio->io_hdr, ctl_ooaq,
ooa_links))) {
case CTL_ACTION_BLOCK:
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_BLOCKED;
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&lun->blocked_queue, &ctsio->io_hdr,
blocked_links);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_ACTION_PASS:
case CTL_ACTION_SKIP:
if (softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IS_WAS_ON_RTR;
ctl_enqueue_rtr((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
ctsio->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* send msg back to other side */
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = ctsio->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = (union ctl_io *)ctsio;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_R2R;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.hdr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
break;
case CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP:
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->ooa_queue, &ctsio->io_hdr, ooa_links);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
retval = 1;
ctl_set_overlapped_cmd(ctsio);
ctl_copy_sense_data_back((union ctl_io *)ctsio, &msg_info);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = ctsio->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_BAD_JUJU;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.scsi), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP_TAG:
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->ooa_queue, &ctsio->io_hdr, ooa_links);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
retval = 1;
ctl_set_overlapped_tag(ctsio, ctsio->tag_num);
ctl_copy_sense_data_back((union ctl_io *)ctsio, &msg_info);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = ctsio->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_BAD_JUJU;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.scsi), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_ACTION_ERROR:
default:
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->ooa_queue, &ctsio->io_hdr, ooa_links);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
retval = 1;
ctl_set_internal_failure(ctsio, /*sks_valid*/ 0,
/*retry_count*/ 0);
ctl_copy_sense_data_back((union ctl_io *)ctsio, &msg_info);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = ctsio->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_BAD_JUJU;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.scsi), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
return (retval);
}
/*
* Returns 0 for success, errno for failure.
*/
static int
ctl_ioctl_fill_ooa(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t *cur_fill_num,
struct ctl_ooa *ooa_hdr, struct ctl_ooa_entry *kern_entries)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
union ctl_io *io;
int retval;
retval = 0;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
for (io = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_FIRST(&lun->ooa_queue); (io != NULL);
(*cur_fill_num)++, io = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_NEXT(&io->io_hdr,
ooa_links)) {
struct ctl_ooa_entry *entry;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If we've got more than we can fit, just count the
* remaining entries.
*/
if (*cur_fill_num >= ooa_hdr->alloc_num)
continue;
entry = &kern_entries[*cur_fill_num];
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
entry->tag_num = io->scsiio.tag_num;
entry->lun_num = lun->lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
entry->start_bt = io->io_hdr.start_bt;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
bcopy(io->scsiio.cdb, entry->cdb, io->scsiio.cdb_len);
entry->cdb_len = io->scsiio.cdb_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_BLOCKED)
entry->cmd_flags |= CTL_OOACMD_FLAG_BLOCKED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DMA_INPROG)
entry->cmd_flags |= CTL_OOACMD_FLAG_DMA;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT)
entry->cmd_flags |= CTL_OOACMD_FLAG_ABORT;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_IS_WAS_ON_RTR)
entry->cmd_flags |= CTL_OOACMD_FLAG_RTR;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DMA_QUEUED)
entry->cmd_flags |= CTL_OOACMD_FLAG_DMA_QUEUED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (retval);
}
static void *
ctl_copyin_alloc(void *user_addr, int len, char *error_str,
size_t error_str_len)
{
void *kptr;
kptr = malloc(len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
if (copyin(user_addr, kptr, len) != 0) {
snprintf(error_str, error_str_len, "Error copying %d bytes "
"from user address %p to kernel address %p", len,
user_addr, kptr);
free(kptr, M_CTL);
return (NULL);
}
return (kptr);
}
static void
ctl_free_args(int num_args, struct ctl_be_arg *args)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
int i;
if (args == NULL)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return;
for (i = 0; i < num_args; i++) {
free(args[i].kname, M_CTL);
free(args[i].kvalue, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
free(args, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static struct ctl_be_arg *
ctl_copyin_args(int num_args, struct ctl_be_arg *uargs,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
char *error_str, size_t error_str_len)
{
struct ctl_be_arg *args;
int i;
args = ctl_copyin_alloc(uargs, num_args * sizeof(*args),
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
error_str, error_str_len);
if (args == NULL)
goto bailout;
for (i = 0; i < num_args; i++) {
args[i].kname = NULL;
args[i].kvalue = NULL;
}
for (i = 0; i < num_args; i++) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
uint8_t *tmpptr;
args[i].kname = ctl_copyin_alloc(args[i].name,
args[i].namelen, error_str, error_str_len);
if (args[i].kname == NULL)
goto bailout;
if (args[i].kname[args[i].namelen - 1] != '\0') {
snprintf(error_str, error_str_len, "Argument %d "
"name is not NUL-terminated", i);
goto bailout;
}
if (args[i].flags & CTL_BEARG_RD) {
tmpptr = ctl_copyin_alloc(args[i].value,
args[i].vallen, error_str, error_str_len);
if (tmpptr == NULL)
goto bailout;
if ((args[i].flags & CTL_BEARG_ASCII)
&& (tmpptr[args[i].vallen - 1] != '\0')) {
snprintf(error_str, error_str_len, "Argument "
"%d value is not NUL-terminated", i);
goto bailout;
}
args[i].kvalue = tmpptr;
} else {
args[i].kvalue = malloc(args[i].vallen,
M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
return (args);
bailout:
ctl_free_args(num_args, args);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (NULL);
}
static void
ctl_copyout_args(int num_args, struct ctl_be_arg *args)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < num_args; i++) {
if (args[i].flags & CTL_BEARG_WR)
copyout(args[i].kvalue, args[i].value, args[i].vallen);
}
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Escape characters that are illegal or not recommended in XML.
*/
int
ctl_sbuf_printf_esc(struct sbuf *sb, char *str, int size)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
char *end = str + size;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int retval;
retval = 0;
for (; *str && str < end; str++) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (*str) {
case '&':
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "&amp;");
break;
case '>':
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "&gt;");
break;
case '<':
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "&lt;");
break;
default:
retval = sbuf_putc(sb, *str);
break;
}
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
return (retval);
}
static void
ctl_id_sbuf(struct ctl_devid *id, struct sbuf *sb)
{
struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *desc;
int i;
if (id == NULL || id->len < 4)
return;
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)id->data;
switch (desc->id_type & SVPD_ID_TYPE_MASK) {
case SVPD_ID_TYPE_T10:
sbuf_printf(sb, "t10.");
break;
case SVPD_ID_TYPE_EUI64:
sbuf_printf(sb, "eui.");
break;
case SVPD_ID_TYPE_NAA:
sbuf_printf(sb, "naa.");
break;
case SVPD_ID_TYPE_SCSI_NAME:
break;
}
switch (desc->proto_codeset & SVPD_ID_CODESET_MASK) {
case SVPD_ID_CODESET_BINARY:
for (i = 0; i < desc->length; i++)
sbuf_printf(sb, "%02x", desc->identifier[i]);
break;
case SVPD_ID_CODESET_ASCII:
sbuf_printf(sb, "%.*s", (int)desc->length,
(char *)desc->identifier);
break;
case SVPD_ID_CODESET_UTF8:
sbuf_printf(sb, "%s", (char *)desc->identifier);
break;
}
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int
ctl_ioctl(struct cdev *dev, u_long cmd, caddr_t addr, int flag,
struct thread *td)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int retval;
softc = control_softc;
retval = 0;
switch (cmd) {
case CTL_IO:
retval = ctl_ioctl_io(dev, cmd, addr, flag, td);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_ENABLE_PORT:
case CTL_DISABLE_PORT:
case CTL_SET_PORT_WWNS: {
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_port_entry *entry;
entry = (struct ctl_port_entry *)addr;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int action, done;
if (port->targ_port < softc->port_min ||
port->targ_port >= softc->port_max)
continue;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
action = 0;
done = 0;
if ((entry->port_type == CTL_PORT_NONE)
&& (entry->targ_port == port->targ_port)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If the user only wants to enable or
* disable or set WWNs on a specific port,
* do the operation and we're done.
*/
action = 1;
done = 1;
} else if (entry->port_type & port->port_type) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Compare the user's type mask with the
* particular frontend type to see if we
* have a match.
*/
action = 1;
done = 0;
/*
* Make sure the user isn't trying to set
* WWNs on multiple ports at the same time.
*/
if (cmd == CTL_SET_PORT_WWNS) {
printf("%s: Can't set WWNs on "
"multiple ports\n", __func__);
retval = EINVAL;
break;
}
}
if (action == 0)
continue;
/*
* XXX KDM we have to drop the lock here, because
* the online/offline operations can potentially
* block. We need to reference count the frontends
* so they can't go away,
*/
if (cmd == CTL_ENABLE_PORT) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_port_online(port);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
} else if (cmd == CTL_DISABLE_PORT) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_port_offline(port);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
} else if (cmd == CTL_SET_PORT_WWNS) {
ctl_port_set_wwns(port,
(entry->flags & CTL_PORT_WWNN_VALID) ?
1 : 0, entry->wwnn,
(entry->flags & CTL_PORT_WWPN_VALID) ?
1 : 0, entry->wwpn);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if (done != 0)
break;
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
break;
}
case CTL_GET_PORT_LIST: {
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_port_list *list;
int i;
list = (struct ctl_port_list *)addr;
if (list->alloc_len != (list->alloc_num *
sizeof(struct ctl_port_entry))) {
printf("%s: CTL_GET_PORT_LIST: alloc_len %u != "
"alloc_num %u * sizeof(struct ctl_port_entry) "
"%zu\n", __func__, list->alloc_len,
list->alloc_num, sizeof(struct ctl_port_entry));
retval = EINVAL;
break;
}
list->fill_len = 0;
list->fill_num = 0;
list->dropped_num = 0;
i = 0;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_port_entry entry, *list_entry;
if (list->fill_num >= list->alloc_num) {
list->dropped_num++;
continue;
}
entry.port_type = port->port_type;
strlcpy(entry.port_name, port->port_name,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
sizeof(entry.port_name));
entry.targ_port = port->targ_port;
entry.physical_port = port->physical_port;
entry.virtual_port = port->virtual_port;
entry.wwnn = port->wwnn;
entry.wwpn = port->wwpn;
if (port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
entry.online = 1;
else
entry.online = 0;
list_entry = &list->entries[i];
retval = copyout(&entry, list_entry, sizeof(entry));
if (retval != 0) {
printf("%s: CTL_GET_PORT_LIST: copyout "
"returned %d\n", __func__, retval);
break;
}
i++;
list->fill_num++;
list->fill_len += sizeof(entry);
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
/*
* If this is non-zero, we had a copyout fault, so there's
* probably no point in attempting to set the status inside
* the structure.
*/
if (retval != 0)
break;
if (list->dropped_num > 0)
list->status = CTL_PORT_LIST_NEED_MORE_SPACE;
else
list->status = CTL_PORT_LIST_OK;
break;
}
case CTL_DUMP_OOA: {
union ctl_io *io;
char printbuf[128];
struct sbuf sb;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
printf("Dumping OOA queues:\n");
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
for (io = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_FIRST(
&lun->ooa_queue); io != NULL;
io = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_NEXT(&io->io_hdr,
ooa_links)) {
sbuf_new(&sb, printbuf, sizeof(printbuf),
SBUF_FIXEDLEN);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "LUN %jd tag 0x%04x%s%s%s%s: ",
(intmax_t)lun->lun,
io->scsiio.tag_num,
(io->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_BLOCKED) ? "" : " BLOCKED",
(io->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_DMA_INPROG) ? " DMA" : "",
(io->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_ABORT) ? " ABORT" : "",
(io->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_IS_WAS_ON_RTR) ? " RTR" : "");
ctl_scsi_command_string(&io->scsiio, NULL, &sb);
sbuf_finish(&sb);
printf("%s\n", sbuf_data(&sb));
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
printf("OOA queues dump done\n");
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
break;
}
case CTL_GET_OOA: {
struct ctl_ooa *ooa_hdr;
struct ctl_ooa_entry *entries;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
uint32_t cur_fill_num;
ooa_hdr = (struct ctl_ooa *)addr;
if ((ooa_hdr->alloc_len == 0)
|| (ooa_hdr->alloc_num == 0)) {
printf("%s: CTL_GET_OOA: alloc len %u and alloc num %u "
"must be non-zero\n", __func__,
ooa_hdr->alloc_len, ooa_hdr->alloc_num);
retval = EINVAL;
break;
}
if (ooa_hdr->alloc_len != (ooa_hdr->alloc_num *
sizeof(struct ctl_ooa_entry))) {
printf("%s: CTL_GET_OOA: alloc len %u must be alloc "
"num %d * sizeof(struct ctl_ooa_entry) %zd\n",
__func__, ooa_hdr->alloc_len,
ooa_hdr->alloc_num,sizeof(struct ctl_ooa_entry));
retval = EINVAL;
break;
}
entries = malloc(ooa_hdr->alloc_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
if (entries == NULL) {
printf("%s: could not allocate %d bytes for OOA "
"dump\n", __func__, ooa_hdr->alloc_len);
retval = ENOMEM;
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (((ooa_hdr->flags & CTL_OOA_FLAG_ALL_LUNS) == 0)
&& ((ooa_hdr->lun_num >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
|| (softc->ctl_luns[ooa_hdr->lun_num] == NULL))) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
free(entries, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
printf("%s: CTL_GET_OOA: invalid LUN %ju\n",
__func__, (uintmax_t)ooa_hdr->lun_num);
retval = EINVAL;
break;
}
cur_fill_num = 0;
if (ooa_hdr->flags & CTL_OOA_FLAG_ALL_LUNS) {
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
retval = ctl_ioctl_fill_ooa(lun, &cur_fill_num,
ooa_hdr, entries);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
if (retval != 0) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
free(entries, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
} else {
lun = softc->ctl_luns[ooa_hdr->lun_num];
retval = ctl_ioctl_fill_ooa(lun, &cur_fill_num,ooa_hdr,
entries);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ooa_hdr->fill_num = min(cur_fill_num, ooa_hdr->alloc_num);
ooa_hdr->fill_len = ooa_hdr->fill_num *
sizeof(struct ctl_ooa_entry);
retval = copyout(entries, ooa_hdr->entries, ooa_hdr->fill_len);
if (retval != 0) {
printf("%s: error copying out %d bytes for OOA dump\n",
__func__, ooa_hdr->fill_len);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
getbintime(&ooa_hdr->cur_bt);
if (cur_fill_num > ooa_hdr->alloc_num) {
ooa_hdr->dropped_num = cur_fill_num -ooa_hdr->alloc_num;
ooa_hdr->status = CTL_OOA_NEED_MORE_SPACE;
} else {
ooa_hdr->dropped_num = 0;
ooa_hdr->status = CTL_OOA_OK;
}
free(entries, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
case CTL_CHECK_OOA: {
union ctl_io *io;
struct ctl_ooa_info *ooa_info;
ooa_info = (struct ctl_ooa_info *)addr;
if (ooa_info->lun_id >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) {
ooa_info->status = CTL_OOA_INVALID_LUN;
break;
}
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
lun = softc->ctl_luns[ooa_info->lun_id];
if (lun == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ooa_info->status = CTL_OOA_INVALID_LUN;
break;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ooa_info->num_entries = 0;
for (io = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_FIRST(&lun->ooa_queue);
io != NULL; io = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_NEXT(
&io->io_hdr, ooa_links)) {
ooa_info->num_entries++;
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ooa_info->status = CTL_OOA_SUCCESS;
break;
}
case CTL_DELAY_IO: {
struct ctl_io_delay_info *delay_info;
delay_info = (struct ctl_io_delay_info *)addr;
#ifdef CTL_IO_DELAY
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((delay_info->lun_id >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
|| (softc->ctl_luns[delay_info->lun_id] == NULL)) {
delay_info->status = CTL_DELAY_STATUS_INVALID_LUN;
} else {
lun = softc->ctl_luns[delay_info->lun_id];
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
delay_info->status = CTL_DELAY_STATUS_OK;
switch (delay_info->delay_type) {
case CTL_DELAY_TYPE_CONT:
break;
case CTL_DELAY_TYPE_ONESHOT:
break;
default:
delay_info->status =
CTL_DELAY_STATUS_INVALID_TYPE;
break;
}
switch (delay_info->delay_loc) {
case CTL_DELAY_LOC_DATAMOVE:
lun->delay_info.datamove_type =
delay_info->delay_type;
lun->delay_info.datamove_delay =
delay_info->delay_secs;
break;
case CTL_DELAY_LOC_DONE:
lun->delay_info.done_type =
delay_info->delay_type;
lun->delay_info.done_delay =
delay_info->delay_secs;
break;
default:
delay_info->status =
CTL_DELAY_STATUS_INVALID_LOC;
break;
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
#else
delay_info->status = CTL_DELAY_STATUS_NOT_IMPLEMENTED;
#endif /* CTL_IO_DELAY */
break;
}
case CTL_REALSYNC_SET: {
int *syncstate;
syncstate = (int *)addr;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
switch (*syncstate) {
case 0:
softc->flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_REAL_SYNC;
break;
case 1:
softc->flags |= CTL_FLAG_REAL_SYNC;
break;
default:
retval = EINVAL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
break;
}
case CTL_REALSYNC_GET: {
int *syncstate;
syncstate = (int*)addr;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (softc->flags & CTL_FLAG_REAL_SYNC)
*syncstate = 1;
else
*syncstate = 0;
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
break;
}
case CTL_SETSYNC:
case CTL_GETSYNC: {
struct ctl_sync_info *sync_info;
sync_info = (struct ctl_sync_info *)addr;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
lun = softc->ctl_luns[sync_info->lun_id];
if (lun == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
sync_info->status = CTL_GS_SYNC_NO_LUN;
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* Get or set the sync interval. We're not bounds checking
* in the set case, hopefully the user won't do something
* silly.
*/
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (cmd == CTL_GETSYNC)
sync_info->sync_interval = lun->sync_interval;
else
lun->sync_interval = sync_info->sync_interval;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
sync_info->status = CTL_GS_SYNC_OK;
break;
}
case CTL_GETSTATS: {
struct ctl_stats *stats;
int i;
stats = (struct ctl_stats *)addr;
if ((sizeof(struct ctl_lun_io_stats) * softc->num_luns) >
stats->alloc_len) {
stats->status = CTL_SS_NEED_MORE_SPACE;
stats->num_luns = softc->num_luns;
break;
}
/*
* XXX KDM no locking here. If the LUN list changes,
* things can blow up.
*/
for (i = 0, lun = STAILQ_FIRST(&softc->lun_list); lun != NULL;
i++, lun = STAILQ_NEXT(lun, links)) {
retval = copyout(&lun->stats, &stats->lun_stats[i],
sizeof(lun->stats));
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
stats->num_luns = softc->num_luns;
stats->fill_len = sizeof(struct ctl_lun_io_stats) *
softc->num_luns;
stats->status = CTL_SS_OK;
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
stats->flags = CTL_STATS_FLAG_TIME_VALID;
#else
stats->flags = CTL_STATS_FLAG_NONE;
#endif
getnanouptime(&stats->timestamp);
break;
}
case CTL_ERROR_INJECT: {
struct ctl_error_desc *err_desc, *new_err_desc;
err_desc = (struct ctl_error_desc *)addr;
new_err_desc = malloc(sizeof(*new_err_desc), M_CTL,
M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
bcopy(err_desc, new_err_desc, sizeof(*new_err_desc));
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
lun = softc->ctl_luns[err_desc->lun_id];
if (lun == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
free(new_err_desc, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
printf("%s: CTL_ERROR_INJECT: invalid LUN %ju\n",
__func__, (uintmax_t)err_desc->lun_id);
retval = EINVAL;
break;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* We could do some checking here to verify the validity
* of the request, but given the complexity of error
* injection requests, the checking logic would be fairly
* complex.
*
* For now, if the request is invalid, it just won't get
* executed and might get deleted.
*/
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&lun->error_list, new_err_desc, links);
/*
* XXX KDM check to make sure the serial number is unique,
* in case we somehow manage to wrap. That shouldn't
* happen for a very long time, but it's the right thing to
* do.
*/
new_err_desc->serial = lun->error_serial;
err_desc->serial = lun->error_serial;
lun->error_serial++;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
case CTL_ERROR_INJECT_DELETE: {
struct ctl_error_desc *delete_desc, *desc, *desc2;
int delete_done;
delete_desc = (struct ctl_error_desc *)addr;
delete_done = 0;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
lun = softc->ctl_luns[delete_desc->lun_id];
if (lun == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
printf("%s: CTL_ERROR_INJECT_DELETE: invalid LUN %ju\n",
__func__, (uintmax_t)delete_desc->lun_id);
retval = EINVAL;
break;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
STAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE(desc, &lun->error_list, links, desc2) {
if (desc->serial != delete_desc->serial)
continue;
STAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->error_list, desc, ctl_error_desc,
links);
free(desc, M_CTL);
delete_done = 1;
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (delete_done == 0) {
printf("%s: CTL_ERROR_INJECT_DELETE: can't find "
"error serial %ju on LUN %u\n", __func__,
delete_desc->serial, delete_desc->lun_id);
retval = EINVAL;
break;
}
break;
}
case CTL_DUMP_STRUCTS: {
int i, j, k;
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_frontend *fe;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
printf("CTL Persistent Reservation information start:\n");
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_LUNS; i++) {
lun = softc->ctl_luns[i];
if ((lun == NULL)
|| ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) != 0))
continue;
for (j = 0; j < CTL_MAX_PORTS; j++) {
if (lun->pr_keys[j] == NULL)
continue;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
for (k = 0; k < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; k++){
if (lun->pr_keys[j][k] == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
printf(" LUN %d port %d iid %d key "
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
"%#jx\n", i, j, k,
(uintmax_t)lun->pr_keys[j][k]);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
}
printf("CTL Persistent Reservation information end\n");
printf("CTL Ports:\n");
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
printf(" Port %d '%s' Frontend '%s' Type %u pp %d vp %d WWNN "
"%#jx WWPN %#jx\n", port->targ_port, port->port_name,
port->frontend->name, port->port_type,
port->physical_port, port->virtual_port,
(uintmax_t)port->wwnn, (uintmax_t)port->wwpn);
for (j = 0; j < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; j++) {
if (port->wwpn_iid[j].in_use == 0 &&
port->wwpn_iid[j].wwpn == 0 &&
port->wwpn_iid[j].name == NULL)
continue;
printf(" iid %u use %d WWPN %#jx '%s'\n",
j, port->wwpn_iid[j].in_use,
(uintmax_t)port->wwpn_iid[j].wwpn,
port->wwpn_iid[j].name);
}
}
printf("CTL Port information end\n");
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
/*
* XXX KDM calling this without a lock. We'd likely want
* to drop the lock before calling the frontend's dump
* routine anyway.
*/
printf("CTL Frontends:\n");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
STAILQ_FOREACH(fe, &softc->fe_list, links) {
printf(" Frontend '%s'\n", fe->name);
if (fe->fe_dump != NULL)
fe->fe_dump();
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
printf("CTL Frontend information end\n");
break;
}
case CTL_LUN_REQ: {
struct ctl_lun_req *lun_req;
struct ctl_backend_driver *backend;
lun_req = (struct ctl_lun_req *)addr;
backend = ctl_backend_find(lun_req->backend);
if (backend == NULL) {
lun_req->status = CTL_LUN_ERROR;
snprintf(lun_req->error_str,
sizeof(lun_req->error_str),
"Backend \"%s\" not found.",
lun_req->backend);
break;
}
if (lun_req->num_be_args > 0) {
lun_req->kern_be_args = ctl_copyin_args(
lun_req->num_be_args,
lun_req->be_args,
lun_req->error_str,
sizeof(lun_req->error_str));
if (lun_req->kern_be_args == NULL) {
lun_req->status = CTL_LUN_ERROR;
break;
}
}
retval = backend->ioctl(dev, cmd, addr, flag, td);
if (lun_req->num_be_args > 0) {
ctl_copyout_args(lun_req->num_be_args,
lun_req->kern_be_args);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_free_args(lun_req->num_be_args,
lun_req->kern_be_args);
}
break;
}
case CTL_LUN_LIST: {
struct sbuf *sb;
struct ctl_lun_list *list;
struct ctl_option *opt;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
list = (struct ctl_lun_list *)addr;
/*
* Allocate a fixed length sbuf here, based on the length
* of the user's buffer. We could allocate an auto-extending
* buffer, and then tell the user how much larger our
* amount of data is than his buffer, but that presents
* some problems:
*
* 1. The sbuf(9) routines use a blocking malloc, and so
* we can't hold a lock while calling them with an
* auto-extending buffer.
*
* 2. There is not currently a LUN reference counting
* mechanism, outside of outstanding transactions on
* the LUN's OOA queue. So a LUN could go away on us
* while we're getting the LUN number, backend-specific
* information, etc. Thus, given the way things
* currently work, we need to hold the CTL lock while
* grabbing LUN information.
*
* So, from the user's standpoint, the best thing to do is
* allocate what he thinks is a reasonable buffer length,
* and then if he gets a CTL_LUN_LIST_NEED_MORE_SPACE error,
* double the buffer length and try again. (And repeat
* that until he succeeds.)
*/
sb = sbuf_new(NULL, NULL, list->alloc_len, SBUF_FIXEDLEN);
if (sb == NULL) {
list->status = CTL_LUN_LIST_ERROR;
snprintf(list->error_str, sizeof(list->error_str),
"Unable to allocate %d bytes for LUN list",
list->alloc_len);
break;
}
sbuf_printf(sb, "<ctllunlist>\n");
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "<lun id=\"%ju\">\n",
(uintmax_t)lun->lun);
/*
* Bail out as soon as we see that we've overfilled
* the buffer.
*/
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<backend_type>%s"
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
"</backend_type>\n",
(lun->backend == NULL) ? "none" :
lun->backend->name);
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<lun_type>%d</lun_type>\n",
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->be_lun->lun_type);
if (retval != 0)
break;
if (lun->backend == NULL) {
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "</lun>\n");
if (retval != 0)
break;
continue;
}
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<size>%ju</size>\n",
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
(lun->be_lun->maxlba > 0) ?
lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1 : 0);
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<blocksize>%u</blocksize>\n",
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->be_lun->blocksize);
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<serial_number>");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = ctl_sbuf_printf_esc(sb,
lun->be_lun->serial_num,
sizeof(lun->be_lun->serial_num));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "</serial_number>\n");
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<device_id>");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = ctl_sbuf_printf_esc(sb,
lun->be_lun->device_id,
sizeof(lun->be_lun->device_id));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "</device_id>\n");
if (retval != 0)
break;
if (lun->backend->lun_info != NULL) {
retval = lun->backend->lun_info(lun->be_lun->be_lun, sb);
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
STAILQ_FOREACH(opt, &lun->be_lun->options, links) {
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<%s>%s</%s>\n",
opt->name, opt->value, opt->name);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "</lun>\n");
if (retval != 0)
break;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if (lun != NULL)
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((retval != 0)
|| ((retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "</ctllunlist>\n")) != 0)) {
retval = 0;
sbuf_delete(sb);
list->status = CTL_LUN_LIST_NEED_MORE_SPACE;
snprintf(list->error_str, sizeof(list->error_str),
"Out of space, %d bytes is too small",
list->alloc_len);
break;
}
sbuf_finish(sb);
retval = copyout(sbuf_data(sb), list->lun_xml,
sbuf_len(sb) + 1);
list->fill_len = sbuf_len(sb) + 1;
list->status = CTL_LUN_LIST_OK;
sbuf_delete(sb);
break;
}
case CTL_ISCSI: {
struct ctl_iscsi *ci;
struct ctl_frontend *fe;
ci = (struct ctl_iscsi *)addr;
2014-07-05 13:50:05 +00:00
fe = ctl_frontend_find("iscsi");
if (fe == NULL) {
ci->status = CTL_ISCSI_ERROR;
snprintf(ci->error_str, sizeof(ci->error_str),
"Frontend \"iscsi\" not found.");
break;
}
retval = fe->ioctl(dev, cmd, addr, flag, td);
break;
}
case CTL_PORT_REQ: {
struct ctl_req *req;
struct ctl_frontend *fe;
req = (struct ctl_req *)addr;
fe = ctl_frontend_find(req->driver);
if (fe == NULL) {
req->status = CTL_LUN_ERROR;
snprintf(req->error_str, sizeof(req->error_str),
"Frontend \"%s\" not found.", req->driver);
break;
}
if (req->num_args > 0) {
req->kern_args = ctl_copyin_args(req->num_args,
req->args, req->error_str, sizeof(req->error_str));
if (req->kern_args == NULL) {
req->status = CTL_LUN_ERROR;
break;
}
}
if (fe->ioctl)
retval = fe->ioctl(dev, cmd, addr, flag, td);
else
retval = ENODEV;
if (req->num_args > 0) {
ctl_copyout_args(req->num_args, req->kern_args);
ctl_free_args(req->num_args, req->kern_args);
}
break;
}
case CTL_PORT_LIST: {
struct sbuf *sb;
struct ctl_port *port;
struct ctl_lun_list *list;
struct ctl_option *opt;
int j;
uint32_t plun;
list = (struct ctl_lun_list *)addr;
sb = sbuf_new(NULL, NULL, list->alloc_len, SBUF_FIXEDLEN);
if (sb == NULL) {
list->status = CTL_LUN_LIST_ERROR;
snprintf(list->error_str, sizeof(list->error_str),
"Unable to allocate %d bytes for LUN list",
list->alloc_len);
break;
}
sbuf_printf(sb, "<ctlportlist>\n");
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "<targ_port id=\"%ju\">\n",
(uintmax_t)port->targ_port);
/*
* Bail out as soon as we see that we've overfilled
* the buffer.
*/
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<frontend_type>%s"
"</frontend_type>\n", port->frontend->name);
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<port_type>%d</port_type>\n",
port->port_type);
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<online>%s</online>\n",
(port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) ? "YES" : "NO");
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<port_name>%s</port_name>\n",
port->port_name);
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<physical_port>%d</physical_port>\n",
port->physical_port);
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<virtual_port>%d</virtual_port>\n",
port->virtual_port);
if (retval != 0)
break;
if (port->target_devid != NULL) {
sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<target>");
ctl_id_sbuf(port->target_devid, sb);
sbuf_printf(sb, "</target>\n");
}
if (port->port_devid != NULL) {
sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<port>");
ctl_id_sbuf(port->port_devid, sb);
sbuf_printf(sb, "</port>\n");
}
if (port->port_info != NULL) {
retval = port->port_info(port->onoff_arg, sb);
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
STAILQ_FOREACH(opt, &port->options, links) {
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<%s>%s</%s>\n",
opt->name, opt->value, opt->name);
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
if (port->lun_map != NULL) {
sbuf_printf(sb, "\t<lun_map>on</lun_map>\n");
for (j = 0; j < CTL_MAX_LUNS; j++) {
plun = ctl_lun_map_from_port(port, j);
if (plun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
sbuf_printf(sb,
"\t<lun id=\"%u\">%u</lun>\n",
j, plun);
}
}
for (j = 0; j < CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT; j++) {
if (port->wwpn_iid[j].in_use == 0 ||
(port->wwpn_iid[j].wwpn == 0 &&
port->wwpn_iid[j].name == NULL))
continue;
if (port->wwpn_iid[j].name != NULL)
retval = sbuf_printf(sb,
"\t<initiator id=\"%u\">%s</initiator>\n",
j, port->wwpn_iid[j].name);
else
retval = sbuf_printf(sb,
"\t<initiator id=\"%u\">naa.%08jx</initiator>\n",
j, port->wwpn_iid[j].wwpn);
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
if (retval != 0)
break;
retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "</targ_port>\n");
if (retval != 0)
break;
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((retval != 0)
|| ((retval = sbuf_printf(sb, "</ctlportlist>\n")) != 0)) {
retval = 0;
sbuf_delete(sb);
list->status = CTL_LUN_LIST_NEED_MORE_SPACE;
snprintf(list->error_str, sizeof(list->error_str),
"Out of space, %d bytes is too small",
list->alloc_len);
break;
}
sbuf_finish(sb);
retval = copyout(sbuf_data(sb), list->lun_xml,
sbuf_len(sb) + 1);
list->fill_len = sbuf_len(sb) + 1;
list->status = CTL_LUN_LIST_OK;
sbuf_delete(sb);
break;
}
case CTL_LUN_MAP: {
struct ctl_lun_map *lm = (struct ctl_lun_map *)addr;
struct ctl_port *port;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (lm->port < softc->port_min ||
lm->port >= softc->port_max ||
(port = softc->ctl_ports[lm->port]) == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
return (ENXIO);
}
if (port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) {
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
if (ctl_lun_map_to_port(port, lun->lun) >=
CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_est_ua_port(lun, lm->port, -1,
CTL_UA_LUN_CHANGE);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
}
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock); // XXX: port_enable sleeps
if (lm->plun < CTL_MAX_LUNS) {
if (lm->lun == UINT32_MAX)
retval = ctl_lun_map_unset(port, lm->plun);
else if (lm->lun < CTL_MAX_LUNS &&
softc->ctl_luns[lm->lun] != NULL)
retval = ctl_lun_map_set(port, lm->plun, lm->lun);
else
return (ENXIO);
} else if (lm->plun == UINT32_MAX) {
if (lm->lun == UINT32_MAX)
retval = ctl_lun_map_deinit(port);
else
retval = ctl_lun_map_init(port);
} else
return (ENXIO);
if (port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE)
ctl_isc_announce_port(port);
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
default: {
/* XXX KDM should we fix this? */
#if 0
struct ctl_backend_driver *backend;
unsigned int type;
int found;
found = 0;
/*
* We encode the backend type as the ioctl type for backend
* ioctls. So parse it out here, and then search for a
* backend of this type.
*/
type = _IOC_TYPE(cmd);
STAILQ_FOREACH(backend, &softc->be_list, links) {
if (backend->type == type) {
found = 1;
break;
}
}
if (found == 0) {
printf("ctl: unknown ioctl command %#lx or backend "
"%d\n", cmd, type);
retval = EINVAL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
retval = backend->ioctl(dev, cmd, addr, flag, td);
#endif
retval = ENOTTY;
break;
}
}
return (retval);
}
uint32_t
ctl_get_initindex(struct ctl_nexus *nexus)
{
return (nexus->initid + (nexus->targ_port * CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
int
ctl_lun_map_init(struct ctl_port *port)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t i;
if (port->lun_map == NULL)
port->lun_map = malloc(sizeof(uint32_t) * CTL_MAX_LUNS,
M_CTL, M_NOWAIT);
if (port->lun_map == NULL)
return (ENOMEM);
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_LUNS; i++)
port->lun_map[i] = UINT32_MAX;
if (port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) {
if (port->lun_disable != NULL) {
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links)
port->lun_disable(port->targ_lun_arg, lun->lun);
}
ctl_isc_announce_port(port);
}
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_map_deinit(struct ctl_port *port)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
if (port->lun_map == NULL)
return (0);
free(port->lun_map, M_CTL);
port->lun_map = NULL;
if (port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) {
if (port->lun_enable != NULL) {
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links)
port->lun_enable(port->targ_lun_arg, lun->lun);
}
ctl_isc_announce_port(port);
}
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_map_set(struct ctl_port *port, uint32_t plun, uint32_t glun)
{
int status;
uint32_t old;
if (port->lun_map == NULL) {
status = ctl_lun_map_init(port);
if (status != 0)
return (status);
}
old = port->lun_map[plun];
port->lun_map[plun] = glun;
if ((port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) && old >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) {
if (port->lun_enable != NULL)
port->lun_enable(port->targ_lun_arg, plun);
ctl_isc_announce_port(port);
}
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_map_unset(struct ctl_port *port, uint32_t plun)
{
uint32_t old;
if (port->lun_map == NULL)
return (0);
old = port->lun_map[plun];
port->lun_map[plun] = UINT32_MAX;
if ((port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) && old < CTL_MAX_LUNS) {
if (port->lun_disable != NULL)
port->lun_disable(port->targ_lun_arg, plun);
ctl_isc_announce_port(port);
}
return (0);
}
uint32_t
ctl_lun_map_from_port(struct ctl_port *port, uint32_t lun_id)
{
if (port == NULL)
return (UINT32_MAX);
if (port->lun_map == NULL || lun_id >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
return (lun_id);
return (port->lun_map[lun_id]);
}
uint32_t
ctl_lun_map_to_port(struct ctl_port *port, uint32_t lun_id)
{
uint32_t i;
if (port == NULL)
return (UINT32_MAX);
if (port->lun_map == NULL)
return (lun_id);
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_LUNS; i++) {
if (port->lun_map[i] == lun_id)
return (i);
}
return (UINT32_MAX);
}
static struct ctl_port *
ctl_io_port(struct ctl_io_hdr *io_hdr)
{
return (control_softc->ctl_ports[io_hdr->nexus.targ_port]);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int
ctl_ffz(uint32_t *mask, uint32_t first, uint32_t last)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
int i;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
for (i = first; i < last; i++) {
if ((mask[i / 32] & (1 << (i % 32))) == 0)
return (i);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
return (-1);
}
int
ctl_set_mask(uint32_t *mask, uint32_t bit)
{
uint32_t chunk, piece;
chunk = bit >> 5;
piece = bit % (sizeof(uint32_t) * 8);
if ((mask[chunk] & (1 << piece)) != 0)
return (-1);
else
mask[chunk] |= (1 << piece);
return (0);
}
int
ctl_clear_mask(uint32_t *mask, uint32_t bit)
{
uint32_t chunk, piece;
chunk = bit >> 5;
piece = bit % (sizeof(uint32_t) * 8);
if ((mask[chunk] & (1 << piece)) == 0)
return (-1);
else
mask[chunk] &= ~(1 << piece);
return (0);
}
int
ctl_is_set(uint32_t *mask, uint32_t bit)
{
uint32_t chunk, piece;
chunk = bit >> 5;
piece = bit % (sizeof(uint32_t) * 8);
if ((mask[chunk] & (1 << piece)) == 0)
return (0);
else
return (1);
}
static uint64_t
ctl_get_prkey(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t residx)
{
uint64_t *t;
t = lun->pr_keys[residx/CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT];
if (t == NULL)
return (0);
return (t[residx % CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT]);
}
static void
ctl_clr_prkey(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t residx)
{
uint64_t *t;
t = lun->pr_keys[residx/CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT];
if (t == NULL)
return;
t[residx % CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT] = 0;
}
static void
ctl_alloc_prkey(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t residx)
{
uint64_t *p;
u_int i;
i = residx/CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT;
if (lun->pr_keys[i] != NULL)
return;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
p = malloc(sizeof(uint64_t) * CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT, M_CTL,
M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (lun->pr_keys[i] == NULL)
lun->pr_keys[i] = p;
else
free(p, M_CTL);
}
static void
ctl_set_prkey(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t residx, uint64_t key)
{
uint64_t *t;
t = lun->pr_keys[residx/CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT];
KASSERT(t != NULL, ("prkey %d is not allocated", residx));
t[residx % CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT] = key;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* ctl_softc, pool_name, total_ctl_io are passed in.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
* npool is passed out.
*/
int
ctl_pool_create(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc, const char *pool_name,
uint32_t total_ctl_io, void **npool)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
#ifdef IO_POOLS
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_io_pool *pool;
pool = (struct ctl_io_pool *)malloc(sizeof(*pool), M_CTL,
M_NOWAIT | M_ZERO);
if (pool == NULL)
return (ENOMEM);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
snprintf(pool->name, sizeof(pool->name), "CTL IO %s", pool_name);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
pool->ctl_softc = ctl_softc;
pool->zone = uma_zsecond_create(pool->name, NULL,
NULL, NULL, NULL, ctl_softc->io_zone);
/* uma_prealloc(pool->zone, total_ctl_io); */
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*npool = pool;
#else
*npool = ctl_softc->io_zone;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
return (0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
void
ctl_pool_free(struct ctl_io_pool *pool)
{
if (pool == NULL)
return;
#ifdef IO_POOLS
uma_zdestroy(pool->zone);
free(pool, M_CTL);
#endif
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
union ctl_io *
ctl_alloc_io(void *pool_ref)
{
union ctl_io *io;
#ifdef IO_POOLS
struct ctl_io_pool *pool = (struct ctl_io_pool *)pool_ref;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io = uma_zalloc(pool->zone, M_WAITOK);
#else
io = uma_zalloc((uma_zone_t)pool_ref, M_WAITOK);
#endif
if (io != NULL)
io->io_hdr.pool = pool_ref;
return (io);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
union ctl_io *
ctl_alloc_io_nowait(void *pool_ref)
{
union ctl_io *io;
#ifdef IO_POOLS
struct ctl_io_pool *pool = (struct ctl_io_pool *)pool_ref;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io = uma_zalloc(pool->zone, M_NOWAIT);
#else
io = uma_zalloc((uma_zone_t)pool_ref, M_NOWAIT);
#endif
if (io != NULL)
io->io_hdr.pool = pool_ref;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (io);
}
void
ctl_free_io(union ctl_io *io)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
#ifdef IO_POOLS
struct ctl_io_pool *pool;
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io == NULL)
return;
#ifdef IO_POOLS
pool = (struct ctl_io_pool *)io->io_hdr.pool;
uma_zfree(pool->zone, io);
#else
uma_zfree((uma_zone_t)io->io_hdr.pool, io);
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
void
ctl_zero_io(union ctl_io *io)
{
void *pool_ref;
if (io == NULL)
return;
/*
* May need to preserve linked list pointers at some point too.
*/
pool_ref = io->io_hdr.pool;
memset(io, 0, sizeof(*io));
io->io_hdr.pool = pool_ref;
}
/*
* This routine is currently used for internal copies of ctl_ios that need
* to persist for some reason after we've already returned status to the
* FETD. (Thus the flag set.)
*
* XXX XXX
* Note that this makes a blind copy of all fields in the ctl_io, except
* for the pool reference. This includes any memory that has been
* allocated! That memory will no longer be valid after done has been
* called, so this would be VERY DANGEROUS for command that actually does
* any reads or writes. Right now (11/7/2005), this is only used for immediate
* start and stop commands, which don't transfer any data, so this is not a
* problem. If it is used for anything else, the caller would also need to
* allocate data buffer space and this routine would need to be modified to
* copy the data buffer(s) as well.
*/
void
ctl_copy_io(union ctl_io *src, union ctl_io *dest)
{
void *pool_ref;
if ((src == NULL)
|| (dest == NULL))
return;
/*
* May need to preserve linked list pointers at some point too.
*/
pool_ref = dest->io_hdr.pool;
memcpy(dest, src, MIN(sizeof(*src), sizeof(*dest)));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
dest->io_hdr.pool = pool_ref;
/*
* We need to know that this is an internal copy, and doesn't need
* to get passed back to the FETD that allocated it.
*/
dest->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_INT_COPY;
}
int
ctl_expand_number(const char *buf, uint64_t *num)
{
char *endptr;
uint64_t number;
unsigned shift;
number = strtoq(buf, &endptr, 0);
switch (tolower((unsigned char)*endptr)) {
case 'e':
shift = 60;
break;
case 'p':
shift = 50;
break;
case 't':
shift = 40;
break;
case 'g':
shift = 30;
break;
case 'm':
shift = 20;
break;
case 'k':
shift = 10;
break;
case 'b':
case '\0': /* No unit. */
*num = number;
return (0);
default:
/* Unrecognized unit. */
return (-1);
}
if ((number << shift) >> shift != number) {
/* Overflow */
return (-1);
}
*num = number << shift;
return (0);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* This routine could be used in the future to load default and/or saved
* mode page parameters for a particuar lun.
*/
static int
ctl_init_page_index(struct ctl_lun *lun)
{
int i;
struct ctl_page_index *page_index;
const char *value;
uint64_t ival;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.index, page_index_template,
sizeof(page_index_template));
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
page_index = &lun->mode_pages.index[i];
/*
* If this is a disk-only mode page, there's no point in
* setting it up. For some pages, we have to have some
* basic information about the disk in order to calculate the
* mode page data.
*/
if ((lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_DIRECT)
&& (page_index->page_flags & CTL_PAGE_FLAG_DISK_ONLY))
continue;
switch (page_index->page_code & SMPH_PC_MASK) {
case SMS_RW_ERROR_RECOVERY_PAGE: {
if (page_index->subpage != SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0)
panic("subpage is incorrect!");
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.rw_er_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&rw_er_page_default,
sizeof(rw_er_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.rw_er_page[CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE],
&rw_er_page_changeable,
sizeof(rw_er_page_changeable));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.rw_er_page[CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
&rw_er_page_default,
sizeof(rw_er_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.rw_er_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&rw_er_page_default,
sizeof(rw_er_page_default));
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.rw_er_page;
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case SMS_FORMAT_DEVICE_PAGE: {
struct scsi_format_page *format_page;
if (page_index->subpage != SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0)
panic("subpage is incorrect!");
/*
* Sectors per track are set above. Bytes per
* sector need to be set here on a per-LUN basis.
*/
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.format_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&format_page_default,
sizeof(format_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.format_page[
CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE], &format_page_changeable,
sizeof(format_page_changeable));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.format_page[CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
&format_page_default,
sizeof(format_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.format_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&format_page_default,
sizeof(format_page_default));
format_page = &lun->mode_pages.format_page[
CTL_PAGE_CURRENT];
scsi_ulto2b(lun->be_lun->blocksize,
format_page->bytes_per_sector);
format_page = &lun->mode_pages.format_page[
CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT];
scsi_ulto2b(lun->be_lun->blocksize,
format_page->bytes_per_sector);
format_page = &lun->mode_pages.format_page[
CTL_PAGE_SAVED];
scsi_ulto2b(lun->be_lun->blocksize,
format_page->bytes_per_sector);
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.format_page;
break;
}
case SMS_RIGID_DISK_PAGE: {
struct scsi_rigid_disk_page *rigid_disk_page;
uint32_t sectors_per_cylinder;
uint64_t cylinders;
#ifndef __XSCALE__
int shift;
#endif /* !__XSCALE__ */
if (page_index->subpage != SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0)
panic("invalid subpage value %d",
page_index->subpage);
/*
* Rotation rate and sectors per track are set
* above. We calculate the cylinders here based on
* capacity. Due to the number of heads and
* sectors per track we're using, smaller arrays
* may turn out to have 0 cylinders. Linux and
* FreeBSD don't pay attention to these mode pages
* to figure out capacity, but Solaris does. It
* seems to deal with 0 cylinders just fine, and
* works out a fake geometry based on the capacity.
*/
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.rigid_disk_page[
CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT], &rigid_disk_page_default,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
sizeof(rigid_disk_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.rigid_disk_page[
CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE],&rigid_disk_page_changeable,
sizeof(rigid_disk_page_changeable));
sectors_per_cylinder = CTL_DEFAULT_SECTORS_PER_TRACK *
CTL_DEFAULT_HEADS;
/*
* The divide method here will be more accurate,
* probably, but results in floating point being
* used in the kernel on i386 (__udivdi3()). On the
* XScale, though, __udivdi3() is implemented in
* software.
*
* The shift method for cylinder calculation is
* accurate if sectors_per_cylinder is a power of
* 2. Otherwise it might be slightly off -- you
* might have a bit of a truncation problem.
*/
#ifdef __XSCALE__
cylinders = (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1) /
sectors_per_cylinder;
#else
for (shift = 31; shift > 0; shift--) {
if (sectors_per_cylinder & (1 << shift))
break;
}
cylinders = (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1) >> shift;
#endif
/*
* We've basically got 3 bytes, or 24 bits for the
* cylinder size in the mode page. If we're over,
* just round down to 2^24.
*/
if (cylinders > 0xffffff)
cylinders = 0xffffff;
rigid_disk_page = &lun->mode_pages.rigid_disk_page[
CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT];
scsi_ulto3b(cylinders, rigid_disk_page->cylinders);
if ((value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options,
"rpm")) != NULL) {
scsi_ulto2b(strtol(value, NULL, 0),
rigid_disk_page->rotation_rate);
}
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.rigid_disk_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&lun->mode_pages.rigid_disk_page[CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
sizeof(rigid_disk_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.rigid_disk_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&lun->mode_pages.rigid_disk_page[CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
sizeof(rigid_disk_page_default));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.rigid_disk_page;
break;
}
case SMS_CACHING_PAGE: {
struct scsi_caching_page *caching_page;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (page_index->subpage != SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0)
panic("invalid subpage value %d",
page_index->subpage);
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.caching_page[CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
&caching_page_default,
sizeof(caching_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.caching_page[
CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE], &caching_page_changeable,
sizeof(caching_page_changeable));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.caching_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&caching_page_default,
sizeof(caching_page_default));
caching_page = &lun->mode_pages.caching_page[
CTL_PAGE_SAVED];
value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options, "writecache");
if (value != NULL && strcmp(value, "off") == 0)
caching_page->flags1 &= ~SCP_WCE;
value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options, "readcache");
if (value != NULL && strcmp(value, "off") == 0)
caching_page->flags1 |= SCP_RCD;
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.caching_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&lun->mode_pages.caching_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
sizeof(caching_page_default));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.caching_page;
break;
}
case SMS_CONTROL_MODE_PAGE: {
switch (page_index->subpage) {
case SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0: {
struct scsi_control_page *control_page;
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.control_page[
CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
&control_page_default,
sizeof(control_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.control_page[
CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE],
&control_page_changeable,
sizeof(control_page_changeable));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.control_page[
CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&control_page_default,
sizeof(control_page_default));
control_page = &lun->mode_pages.control_page[
CTL_PAGE_SAVED];
value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options,
"reordering");
if (value != NULL &&
strcmp(value, "unrestricted") == 0) {
control_page->queue_flags &=
~SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK;
control_page->queue_flags |=
SCP_QUEUE_ALG_UNRESTRICTED;
}
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.control_page[
CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&lun->mode_pages.control_page[
CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
sizeof(control_page_default));
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.control_page;
break;
}
case 0x01:
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.control_ext_page[
CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
&control_ext_page_default,
sizeof(control_ext_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.control_ext_page[
CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE],
&control_ext_page_changeable,
sizeof(control_ext_page_changeable));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.control_ext_page[
CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&control_ext_page_default,
sizeof(control_ext_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.control_ext_page[
CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&lun->mode_pages.control_ext_page[
CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
sizeof(control_ext_page_default));
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.control_ext_page;
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
case SMS_INFO_EXCEPTIONS_PAGE: {
switch (page_index->subpage) {
case SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0:
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.ie_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&ie_page_default,
sizeof(ie_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.ie_page[
CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE], &ie_page_changeable,
sizeof(ie_page_changeable));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.ie_page[CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
&ie_page_default,
sizeof(ie_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.ie_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&ie_page_default,
sizeof(ie_page_default));
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.ie_page;
break;
case 0x02: {
struct ctl_logical_block_provisioning_page *page;
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.lbp_page[CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
&lbp_page_default,
sizeof(lbp_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.lbp_page[
CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE], &lbp_page_changeable,
sizeof(lbp_page_changeable));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.lbp_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&lbp_page_default,
sizeof(lbp_page_default));
page = &lun->mode_pages.lbp_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED];
value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options,
"avail-threshold");
if (value != NULL &&
ctl_expand_number(value, &ival) == 0) {
page->descr[0].flags |= SLBPPD_ENABLED |
SLBPPD_ARMING_DEC;
if (lun->be_lun->blocksize)
ival /= lun->be_lun->blocksize;
else
ival /= 512;
scsi_ulto4b(ival >> CTL_LBP_EXPONENT,
page->descr[0].count);
}
value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options,
"used-threshold");
if (value != NULL &&
ctl_expand_number(value, &ival) == 0) {
page->descr[1].flags |= SLBPPD_ENABLED |
SLBPPD_ARMING_INC;
if (lun->be_lun->blocksize)
ival /= lun->be_lun->blocksize;
else
ival /= 512;
scsi_ulto4b(ival >> CTL_LBP_EXPONENT,
page->descr[1].count);
}
value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options,
"pool-avail-threshold");
if (value != NULL &&
ctl_expand_number(value, &ival) == 0) {
page->descr[2].flags |= SLBPPD_ENABLED |
SLBPPD_ARMING_DEC;
if (lun->be_lun->blocksize)
ival /= lun->be_lun->blocksize;
else
ival /= 512;
scsi_ulto4b(ival >> CTL_LBP_EXPONENT,
page->descr[2].count);
}
value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options,
"pool-used-threshold");
if (value != NULL &&
ctl_expand_number(value, &ival) == 0) {
page->descr[3].flags |= SLBPPD_ENABLED |
SLBPPD_ARMING_INC;
if (lun->be_lun->blocksize)
ival /= lun->be_lun->blocksize;
else
ival /= 512;
scsi_ulto4b(ival >> CTL_LBP_EXPONENT,
page->descr[3].count);
}
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.lbp_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&lun->mode_pages.lbp_page[CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
sizeof(lbp_page_default));
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.lbp_page;
}}
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case SMS_VENDOR_SPECIFIC_PAGE:{
switch (page_index->subpage) {
case DBGCNF_SUBPAGE_CODE: {
struct copan_debugconf_subpage *current_page,
*saved_page;
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.debugconf_subpage[
CTL_PAGE_CURRENT],
&debugconf_page_default,
sizeof(debugconf_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.debugconf_subpage[
CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE],
&debugconf_page_changeable,
sizeof(debugconf_page_changeable));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.debugconf_subpage[
CTL_PAGE_DEFAULT],
&debugconf_page_default,
sizeof(debugconf_page_default));
memcpy(&lun->mode_pages.debugconf_subpage[
CTL_PAGE_SAVED],
&debugconf_page_default,
sizeof(debugconf_page_default));
page_index->page_data =
(uint8_t *)lun->mode_pages.debugconf_subpage;
current_page = (struct copan_debugconf_subpage *)
(page_index->page_data +
(page_index->page_len *
CTL_PAGE_CURRENT));
saved_page = (struct copan_debugconf_subpage *)
(page_index->page_data +
(page_index->page_len *
CTL_PAGE_SAVED));
break;
}
default:
panic("invalid subpage value %d",
page_index->subpage);
break;
}
break;
}
default:
panic("invalid page value %d",
page_index->page_code & SMPH_PC_MASK);
break;
}
}
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
static int
ctl_init_log_page_index(struct ctl_lun *lun)
{
struct ctl_page_index *page_index;
int i, j, k, prev;
memcpy(&lun->log_pages.index, log_page_index_template,
sizeof(log_page_index_template));
prev = -1;
for (i = 0, j = 0, k = 0; i < CTL_NUM_LOG_PAGES; i++) {
page_index = &lun->log_pages.index[i];
/*
* If this is a disk-only mode page, there's no point in
* setting it up. For some pages, we have to have some
* basic information about the disk in order to calculate the
* mode page data.
*/
if ((lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_DIRECT)
&& (page_index->page_flags & CTL_PAGE_FLAG_DISK_ONLY))
continue;
if (page_index->page_code == SLS_LOGICAL_BLOCK_PROVISIONING &&
lun->backend->lun_attr == NULL)
continue;
if (page_index->page_code != prev) {
lun->log_pages.pages_page[j] = page_index->page_code;
prev = page_index->page_code;
j++;
}
lun->log_pages.subpages_page[k*2] = page_index->page_code;
lun->log_pages.subpages_page[k*2+1] = page_index->subpage;
k++;
}
lun->log_pages.index[0].page_data = &lun->log_pages.pages_page[0];
lun->log_pages.index[0].page_len = j;
lun->log_pages.index[1].page_data = &lun->log_pages.subpages_page[0];
lun->log_pages.index[1].page_len = k * 2;
lun->log_pages.index[2].page_data = &lun->log_pages.lbp_page[0];
lun->log_pages.index[2].page_len = 12*CTL_NUM_LBP_PARAMS;
lun->log_pages.index[3].page_data = (uint8_t *)&lun->log_pages.stat_page;
lun->log_pages.index[3].page_len = sizeof(lun->log_pages.stat_page);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
static int
hex2bin(const char *str, uint8_t *buf, int buf_size)
{
int i;
u_char c;
memset(buf, 0, buf_size);
while (isspace(str[0]))
str++;
if (str[0] == '0' && (str[1] == 'x' || str[1] == 'X'))
str += 2;
buf_size *= 2;
for (i = 0; str[i] != 0 && i < buf_size; i++) {
c = str[i];
if (isdigit(c))
c -= '0';
else if (isalpha(c))
c -= isupper(c) ? 'A' - 10 : 'a' - 10;
else
break;
if (c >= 16)
break;
if ((i & 1) == 0)
buf[i / 2] |= (c << 4);
else
buf[i / 2] |= c;
}
return ((i + 1) / 2);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* LUN allocation.
*
* Requirements:
* - caller allocates and zeros LUN storage, or passes in a NULL LUN if he
* wants us to allocate the LUN and he can block.
* - ctl_softc is always set
* - be_lun is set if the LUN has a backend (needed for disk LUNs)
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero (errno) for failure.
*/
static int
ctl_alloc_lun(struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc, struct ctl_lun *ctl_lun,
struct ctl_be_lun *const be_lun)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_lun *nlun, *lun;
struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *desc;
struct scsi_vpd_id_t10 *t10id;
const char *eui, *naa, *scsiname, *vendor;
int lun_number, i, lun_malloced;
2014-07-06 20:09:23 +00:00
int devidlen, idlen1, idlen2 = 0, len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (be_lun == NULL)
return (EINVAL);
/*
* We currently only support Direct Access or Processor LUN types.
*/
switch (be_lun->lun_type) {
case T_DIRECT:
break;
case T_PROCESSOR:
break;
case T_SEQUENTIAL:
case T_CHANGER:
default:
be_lun->lun_config_status(be_lun->be_lun,
CTL_LUN_CONFIG_FAILURE);
break;
}
if (ctl_lun == NULL) {
lun = malloc(sizeof(*lun), M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
lun_malloced = 1;
} else {
lun_malloced = 0;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = ctl_lun;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
memset(lun, 0, sizeof(*lun));
if (lun_malloced)
lun->flags = CTL_LUN_MALLOCED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* Generate LUN ID. */
devidlen = max(CTL_DEVID_MIN_LEN,
strnlen(be_lun->device_id, CTL_DEVID_LEN));
idlen1 = sizeof(*t10id) + devidlen;
len = sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor) + idlen1;
scsiname = ctl_get_opt(&be_lun->options, "scsiname");
if (scsiname != NULL) {
idlen2 = roundup2(strlen(scsiname) + 1, 4);
len += sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor) + idlen2;
}
eui = ctl_get_opt(&be_lun->options, "eui");
if (eui != NULL) {
len += sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor) + 16;
}
naa = ctl_get_opt(&be_lun->options, "naa");
if (naa != NULL) {
len += sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor) + 16;
}
lun->lun_devid = malloc(sizeof(struct ctl_devid) + len,
M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)lun->lun_devid->data;
desc->proto_codeset = SVPD_ID_CODESET_ASCII;
desc->id_type = SVPD_ID_PIV | SVPD_ID_ASSOC_LUN | SVPD_ID_TYPE_T10;
desc->length = idlen1;
t10id = (struct scsi_vpd_id_t10 *)&desc->identifier[0];
memset(t10id->vendor, ' ', sizeof(t10id->vendor));
if ((vendor = ctl_get_opt(&be_lun->options, "vendor")) == NULL) {
strncpy((char *)t10id->vendor, CTL_VENDOR, sizeof(t10id->vendor));
} else {
strncpy(t10id->vendor, vendor,
min(sizeof(t10id->vendor), strlen(vendor)));
}
strncpy((char *)t10id->vendor_spec_id,
(char *)be_lun->device_id, devidlen);
if (scsiname != NULL) {
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)(&desc->identifier[0] +
desc->length);
desc->proto_codeset = SVPD_ID_CODESET_UTF8;
desc->id_type = SVPD_ID_PIV | SVPD_ID_ASSOC_LUN |
SVPD_ID_TYPE_SCSI_NAME;
desc->length = idlen2;
strlcpy(desc->identifier, scsiname, idlen2);
}
if (eui != NULL) {
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)(&desc->identifier[0] +
desc->length);
desc->proto_codeset = SVPD_ID_CODESET_BINARY;
desc->id_type = SVPD_ID_PIV | SVPD_ID_ASSOC_LUN |
SVPD_ID_TYPE_EUI64;
desc->length = hex2bin(eui, desc->identifier, 16);
desc->length = desc->length > 12 ? 16 :
(desc->length > 8 ? 12 : 8);
len -= 16 - desc->length;
}
if (naa != NULL) {
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)(&desc->identifier[0] +
desc->length);
desc->proto_codeset = SVPD_ID_CODESET_BINARY;
desc->id_type = SVPD_ID_PIV | SVPD_ID_ASSOC_LUN |
SVPD_ID_TYPE_NAA;
desc->length = hex2bin(naa, desc->identifier, 16);
desc->length = desc->length > 8 ? 16 : 8;
len -= 16 - desc->length;
}
lun->lun_devid->len = len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&ctl_softc->ctl_lock);
/*
* See if the caller requested a particular LUN number. If so, see
* if it is available. Otherwise, allocate the first available LUN.
*/
if (be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_ID_REQ) {
if ((be_lun->req_lun_id > (CTL_MAX_LUNS - 1))
|| (ctl_is_set(ctl_softc->ctl_lun_mask, be_lun->req_lun_id))) {
mtx_unlock(&ctl_softc->ctl_lock);
if (be_lun->req_lun_id > (CTL_MAX_LUNS - 1)) {
printf("ctl: requested LUN ID %d is higher "
"than CTL_MAX_LUNS - 1 (%d)\n",
be_lun->req_lun_id, CTL_MAX_LUNS - 1);
} else {
/*
* XXX KDM return an error, or just assign
* another LUN ID in this case??
*/
printf("ctl: requested LUN ID %d is already "
"in use\n", be_lun->req_lun_id);
}
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_MALLOCED)
free(lun, M_CTL);
be_lun->lun_config_status(be_lun->be_lun,
CTL_LUN_CONFIG_FAILURE);
return (ENOSPC);
}
lun_number = be_lun->req_lun_id;
} else {
lun_number = ctl_ffz(ctl_softc->ctl_lun_mask, 0, CTL_MAX_LUNS);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (lun_number == -1) {
mtx_unlock(&ctl_softc->ctl_lock);
printf("ctl: can't allocate LUN, out of LUNs\n");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_MALLOCED)
free(lun, M_CTL);
be_lun->lun_config_status(be_lun->be_lun,
CTL_LUN_CONFIG_FAILURE);
return (ENOSPC);
}
}
ctl_set_mask(ctl_softc->ctl_lun_mask, lun_number);
mtx_init(&lun->lun_lock, "CTL LUN", NULL, MTX_DEF);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->lun = lun_number;
lun->be_lun = be_lun;
/*
* The processor LUN is always enabled. Disk LUNs come on line
* disabled, and must be enabled by the backend.
*/
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_DISABLED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->backend = be_lun->be;
be_lun->ctl_lun = lun;
be_lun->lun_id = lun_number;
atomic_add_int(&be_lun->be->num_luns, 1);
if (be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_OFFLINE)
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_OFFLINE;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_POWERED_OFF)
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_STOPPED;
if (be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_INOPERABLE)
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_INOPERABLE;
if (be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_PRIMARY)
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC;
lun->ctl_softc = ctl_softc;
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
lun->last_busy = getsbinuptime();
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
TAILQ_INIT(&lun->ooa_queue);
TAILQ_INIT(&lun->blocked_queue);
STAILQ_INIT(&lun->error_list);
ctl_tpc_lun_init(lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Initialize the mode and log page index.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
ctl_init_page_index(lun);
ctl_init_log_page_index(lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Now, before we insert this lun on the lun list, set the lun
* inventory changed UA for all other luns.
*/
STAILQ_FOREACH(nlun, &ctl_softc->lun_list, links) {
mtx_lock(&nlun->lun_lock);
ctl_est_ua_all(nlun, -1, CTL_UA_LUN_CHANGE);
mtx_unlock(&nlun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&ctl_softc->lun_list, lun, links);
ctl_softc->ctl_luns[lun_number] = lun;
ctl_softc->num_luns++;
/* Setup statistics gathering */
lun->stats.device_type = be_lun->lun_type;
lun->stats.lun_number = lun_number;
if (lun->stats.device_type == T_DIRECT)
lun->stats.blocksize = be_lun->blocksize;
else
lun->stats.flags = CTL_LUN_STATS_NO_BLOCKSIZE;
for (i = 0;i < CTL_MAX_PORTS;i++)
lun->stats.ports[i].targ_port = i;
mtx_unlock(&ctl_softc->ctl_lock);
lun->be_lun->lun_config_status(lun->be_lun->be_lun, CTL_LUN_CONFIG_OK);
return (0);
}
/*
* Delete a LUN.
* Assumptions:
* - LUN has already been marked invalid and any pending I/O has been taken
* care of.
*/
static int
ctl_free_lun(struct ctl_lun *lun)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
struct ctl_lun *nlun;
int i;
softc = lun->ctl_softc;
mtx_assert(&softc->ctl_lock, MA_OWNED);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
STAILQ_REMOVE(&softc->lun_list, lun, ctl_lun, links);
ctl_clear_mask(softc->ctl_lun_mask, lun->lun);
softc->ctl_luns[lun->lun] = NULL;
if (!TAILQ_EMPTY(&lun->ooa_queue))
panic("Freeing a LUN %p with outstanding I/O!!\n", lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc->num_luns--;
/*
* Tell the backend to free resources, if this LUN has a backend.
*/
atomic_subtract_int(&lun->be_lun->be->num_luns, 1);
lun->be_lun->lun_shutdown(lun->be_lun->be_lun);
ctl_tpc_lun_shutdown(lun);
mtx_destroy(&lun->lun_lock);
free(lun->lun_devid, M_CTL);
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_PORTS; i++)
free(lun->pending_ua[i], M_CTL);
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_PORTS; i++)
free(lun->pr_keys[i], M_CTL);
free(lun->write_buffer, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_MALLOCED)
free(lun, M_CTL);
STAILQ_FOREACH(nlun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
mtx_lock(&nlun->lun_lock);
ctl_est_ua_all(nlun, -1, CTL_UA_LUN_CHANGE);
mtx_unlock(&nlun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
return (0);
}
static void
ctl_create_lun(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* ctl_alloc_lun() should handle all potential failure cases.
*/
ctl_alloc_lun(softc, NULL, be_lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
int
ctl_add_lun(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&softc->pending_lun_queue, be_lun, links);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
wakeup(&softc->pending_lun_queue);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_enable_lun(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
struct ctl_port *port, *nport;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int retval;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) == 0) {
/*
* eh? Why did we get called if the LUN is already
* enabled?
*/
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_DISABLED;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
for (port = STAILQ_FIRST(&softc->port_list); port != NULL; port = nport) {
nport = STAILQ_NEXT(port, links);
if ((port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) == 0 ||
port->lun_map != NULL || port->lun_enable == NULL)
continue;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Drop the lock while we call the FETD's enable routine.
* This can lead to a callback into CTL (at least in the
* case of the internal initiator frontend.
*/
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
retval = port->lun_enable(port->targ_lun_arg, lun->lun);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (retval != 0) {
printf("%s: FETD %s port %d returned error "
"%d for lun_enable on lun %jd\n",
__func__, port->port_name, port->targ_port,
retval, (intmax_t)lun->lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_isc_announce_lun(lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_disable_lun(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int retval;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_DISABLED;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
if ((port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) == 0 ||
port->lun_map != NULL || port->lun_disable == NULL)
continue;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Drop the lock before we call the frontend's disable
* routine, to avoid lock order reversals.
*
* XXX KDM what happens if the frontend list changes while
* we're traversing it? It's unlikely, but should be handled.
*/
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
retval = port->lun_disable(port->targ_lun_arg, lun->lun);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (retval != 0) {
printf("%s: FETD %s port %d returned error "
"%d for lun_disable on lun %jd\n",
__func__, port->port_name, port->targ_port,
retval, (intmax_t)lun->lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_isc_announce_lun(lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_start_lun(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_STOPPED;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_stop_lun(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_STOPPED;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_offline(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_OFFLINE;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_online(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_OFFLINE;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_primary(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC;
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, -1, CTL_UA_ASYM_ACC_CHANGE);
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_isc_announce_lun(lun);
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_secondary(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC;
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, -1, CTL_UA_ASYM_ACC_CHANGE);
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_isc_announce_lun(lun);
return (0);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int
ctl_invalidate_lun(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_lun *lun;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* The LUN needs to be disabled before it can be marked invalid.
*/
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) == 0) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (-1);
}
/*
* Mark the LUN invalid.
*/
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_INVALID;
/*
* If there is nothing in the OOA queue, go ahead and free the LUN.
* If we have something in the OOA queue, we'll free it when the
* last I/O completes.
*/
if (TAILQ_EMPTY(&lun->ooa_queue)) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_free_lun(lun);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
} else
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_inoperable(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_INOPERABLE;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_lun_operable(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_INOPERABLE;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
void
ctl_lun_capacity_changed(struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun = (struct ctl_lun *)be_lun->ctl_lun;
union ctl_ha_msg msg;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, -1, CTL_UA_CAPACITY_CHANGED);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (lun->ctl_softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER) {
/* Send msg to other side. */
bzero(&msg.ua, sizeof(msg.ua));
msg.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_UA;
msg.hdr.nexus.initid = -1;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_port = -1;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_lun = lun->lun;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun = lun->lun;
msg.ua.ua_all = 1;
msg.ua.ua_set = 1;
msg.ua.ua_type = CTL_UA_CAPACITY_CHANGED;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg, sizeof(msg.ua),
M_WAITOK);
}
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Backend "memory move is complete" callback for requests that never
* make it down to say RAIDCore's configuration code.
*/
int
ctl_config_move_done(union ctl_io *io)
{
int retval;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_config_move_done\n"));
KASSERT(io->io_hdr.io_type == CTL_IO_SCSI,
("Config I/O type isn't CTL_IO_SCSI (%d)!", io->io_hdr.io_type));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if ((io->io_hdr.port_status != 0) &&
((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) == CTL_STATUS_NONE ||
(io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) == CTL_SUCCESS)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* For hardware error sense keys, the sense key
* specific value is defined to be a retry count,
* but we use it to pass back an internal FETD
* error code. XXX KDM Hopefully the FETD is only
* using 16 bits for an error code, since that's
* all the space we have in the sks field.
*/
ctl_set_internal_failure(&io->scsiio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*retry_count*/
io->io_hdr.port_status);
}
if (ctl_debug & CTL_DEBUG_CDB_DATA)
ctl_data_print(io);
if (((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK) == CTL_FLAG_DATA_IN) ||
((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_STATUS_NONE &&
(io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_SUCCESS) ||
((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT) != 0)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* XXX KDM just assuming a single pointer here, and not a
* S/G list. If we start using S/G lists for config data,
* we'll need to know how to clean them up here as well.
*/
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED)
free(io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_done(io);
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
/*
* XXX KDM now we need to continue data movement. Some
* options:
* - call ctl_scsiio() again? We don't do this for data
* writes, because for those at least we know ahead of
* time where the write will go and how long it is. For
* config writes, though, that information is largely
* contained within the write itself, thus we need to
* parse out the data again.
*
* - Call some other function once the data is in?
*/
/*
* XXX KDM call ctl_scsiio() again for now, and check flag
* bits to see whether we're allocated or not.
*/
retval = ctl_scsiio(&io->scsiio);
}
return (retval);
}
/*
* This gets called by a backend driver when it is done with a
* data_submit method.
*/
void
ctl_data_submit_done(union ctl_io *io)
{
/*
* If the IO_CONT flag is set, we need to call the supplied
* function to continue processing the I/O, instead of completing
* the I/O just yet.
*
* If there is an error, though, we don't want to keep processing.
* Instead, just send status back to the initiator.
*/
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_IO_CONT) &&
(io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT) == 0 &&
((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) == CTL_STATUS_NONE ||
(io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) == CTL_SUCCESS)) {
io->scsiio.io_cont(io);
return;
}
ctl_done(io);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* This gets called by a backend driver when it is done with a
* configuration write.
*/
void
ctl_config_write_done(union ctl_io *io)
{
uint8_t *buf;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If the IO_CONT flag is set, we need to call the supplied
* function to continue processing the I/O, instead of completing
* the I/O just yet.
*
* If there is an error, though, we don't want to keep processing.
* Instead, just send status back to the initiator.
*/
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_IO_CONT) &&
(io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT) == 0 &&
((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) == CTL_STATUS_NONE ||
(io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) == CTL_SUCCESS)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->scsiio.io_cont(io);
return;
}
/*
* Since a configuration write can be done for commands that actually
* have data allocated, like write buffer, and commands that have
* no data, like start/stop unit, we need to check here.
*/
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED)
buf = io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr;
else
buf = NULL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_done(io);
if (buf)
free(buf, M_CTL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
void
ctl_config_read_done(union ctl_io *io)
{
uint8_t *buf;
/*
* If there is some error -- we are done, skip data transfer.
*/
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT) != 0 ||
((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_STATUS_NONE &&
(io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_SUCCESS)) {
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED)
buf = io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr;
else
buf = NULL;
ctl_done(io);
if (buf)
free(buf, M_CTL);
return;
}
/*
* If the IO_CONT flag is set, we need to call the supplied
* function to continue processing the I/O, instead of completing
* the I/O just yet.
*/
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_IO_CONT) {
io->scsiio.io_cont(io);
return;
}
ctl_datamove(io);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* SCSI release command.
*/
int
ctl_scsi_release(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
int length, longid, thirdparty_id, resv_id;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t residx;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
length = 0;
resv_id = 0;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_scsi_release\n"));
residx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case RELEASE_10: {
struct scsi_release_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_release_10 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SR10_LONGID)
longid = 1;
else
thirdparty_id = cdb->thirdparty_id;
resv_id = cdb->resv_id;
length = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
}
/*
* XXX KDM right now, we only support LUN reservation. We don't
* support 3rd party reservations, or extent reservations, which
* might actually need the parameter list. If we've gotten this
* far, we've got a LUN reservation. Anything else got kicked out
* above. So, according to SPC, ignore the length.
*/
length = 0;
if (((ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0)
&& (length > 0)) {
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(length, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
ctsio->kern_data_len = length;
ctsio->kern_total_len = length;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
if (length > 0)
thirdparty_id = scsi_8btou64(ctsio->kern_data_ptr);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* According to SPC, it is not an error for an intiator to attempt
* to release a reservation on a LUN that isn't reserved, or that
* is reserved by another initiator. The reservation can only be
* released, though, by the initiator who made it or by one of
* several reset type events.
*/
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_RESERVED) && (lun->res_idx == residx))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_RESERVED;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) {
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
}
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_scsi_reserve(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
int extent, thirdparty, longid;
int resv_id, length;
uint64_t thirdparty_id;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t residx;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
extent = 0;
thirdparty = 0;
longid = 0;
resv_id = 0;
length = 0;
thirdparty_id = 0;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_reserve\n"));
residx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case RESERVE_10: {
struct scsi_reserve_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_reserve_10 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SR10_LONGID)
longid = 1;
else
thirdparty_id = cdb->thirdparty_id;
resv_id = cdb->resv_id;
length = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
}
/*
* XXX KDM right now, we only support LUN reservation. We don't
* support 3rd party reservations, or extent reservations, which
* might actually need the parameter list. If we've gotten this
* far, we've got a LUN reservation. Anything else got kicked out
* above. So, according to SPC, ignore the length.
*/
length = 0;
if (((ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0)
&& (length > 0)) {
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(length, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
ctsio->kern_data_len = length;
ctsio->kern_total_len = length;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
if (length > 0)
thirdparty_id = scsi_8btou64(ctsio->kern_data_ptr);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_RESERVED) && (lun->res_idx != residx)) {
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
goto bailout;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_RESERVED;
lun->res_idx = residx;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
bailout:
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) {
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
}
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_start_stop(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_start_stop_unit *cdb;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int retval;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_start_stop\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
retval = 0;
cdb = (struct scsi_start_stop_unit *)ctsio->cdb;
/*
* XXX KDM
* We don't support the immediate bit on a stop unit. In order to
* do that, we would need to code up a way to know that a stop is
* pending, and hold off any new commands until it completes, one
* way or another. Then we could accept or reject those commands
* depending on its status. We would almost need to do the reverse
* of what we do below for an immediate start -- return the copy of
* the ctl_io to the FETD with status to send to the host (and to
* free the copy!) and then free the original I/O once the stop
* actually completes. That way, the OOA queue mechanism can work
* to block commands that shouldn't proceed. Another alternative
* would be to put the copy in the queue in place of the original,
* and return the original back to the caller. That could be
* slightly safer..
*/
if ((cdb->byte2 & SSS_IMMED)
&& ((cdb->how & SSS_START) == 0)) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 1,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED)
&& ((cdb->how & SSS_START)==0)) {
uint32_t residx;
residx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, residx) == 0
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
|| (lun->pr_res_idx!=residx && lun->res_type < 4)) {
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
}
/*
* If there is no backend on this device, we can't start or stop
* it. In theory we shouldn't get any start/stop commands in the
* first place at this level if the LUN doesn't have a backend.
* That should get stopped by the command decode code.
*/
if (lun->backend == NULL) {
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* XXX KDM Copan-specific offline behavior.
* Figure out a reasonable way to port this?
*/
#ifdef NEEDTOPORT
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (((cdb->byte2 & SSS_ONOFFLINE) == 0)
&& (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_OFFLINE)) {
/*
* If the LUN is offline, and the on/offline bit isn't set,
* reject the start or stop. Otherwise, let it through.
*/
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_lun_not_ready(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
} else {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif /* NEEDTOPORT */
/*
* This could be a start or a stop when we're online,
* or a stop/offline or start/online. A start or stop when
* we're offline is covered in the case above.
*/
/*
* In the non-immediate case, we send the request to
* the backend and return status to the user when
* it is done.
*
* In the immediate case, we allocate a new ctl_io
* to hold a copy of the request, and send that to
* the backend. We then set good status on the
* user's request and return it immediately.
*/
if (cdb->byte2 & SSS_IMMED) {
union ctl_io *new_io;
new_io = ctl_alloc_io(ctsio->io_hdr.pool);
ctl_copy_io((union ctl_io *)ctsio, new_io);
retval = lun->backend->config_write(new_io);
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
retval = lun->backend->config_write(
(union ctl_io *)ctsio);
}
#ifdef NEEDTOPORT
}
#endif
return (retval);
}
/*
* We support the SYNCHRONIZE CACHE command (10 and 16 byte versions), but
* we don't really do anything with the LBA and length fields if the user
* passes them in. Instead we'll just flush out the cache for the entire
* LUN.
*/
int
ctl_sync_cache(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
struct ctl_lba_len_flags *lbalen;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
uint64_t starting_lba;
uint32_t block_count;
int retval;
uint8_t byte2;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_sync_cache\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = 0;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case SYNCHRONIZE_CACHE: {
struct scsi_sync_cache *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_sync_cache *)ctsio->cdb;
starting_lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->begin_lba);
block_count = scsi_2btoul(cdb->lb_count);
byte2 = cdb->byte2;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
case SYNCHRONIZE_CACHE_16: {
struct scsi_sync_cache_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_sync_cache_16 *)ctsio->cdb;
starting_lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->begin_lba);
block_count = scsi_4btoul(cdb->lb_count);
byte2 = cdb->byte2;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
default:
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
goto bailout;
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
/*
* We check the LBA and length, but don't do anything with them.
* A SYNCHRONIZE CACHE will cause the entire cache for this lun to
* get flushed. This check will just help satisfy anyone who wants
* to see an error for an out of range LBA.
*/
if ((starting_lba + block_count) > (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1)) {
ctl_set_lba_out_of_range(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
goto bailout;
}
/*
* If this LUN has no backend, we can't flush the cache anyway.
*/
if (lun->backend == NULL) {
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
goto bailout;
}
lbalen = (struct ctl_lba_len_flags *)&ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
lbalen->lba = starting_lba;
lbalen->len = block_count;
lbalen->flags = byte2;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Check to see whether we're configured to send the SYNCHRONIZE
* CACHE command directly to the back end.
*/
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
if ((softc->flags & CTL_FLAG_REAL_SYNC)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
&& (++(lun->sync_count) >= lun->sync_interval)) {
lun->sync_count = 0;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = lun->backend->config_write((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
} else {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
}
bailout:
return (retval);
}
int
ctl_format(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_format *cdb;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int length, defect_list_len;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_format\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
cdb = (struct scsi_format *)ctsio->cdb;
length = 0;
if (cdb->byte2 & SF_FMTDATA) {
if (cdb->byte2 & SF_LONGLIST)
length = sizeof(struct scsi_format_header_long);
else
length = sizeof(struct scsi_format_header_short);
}
if (((ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0)
&& (length > 0)) {
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(length, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
ctsio->kern_data_len = length;
ctsio->kern_total_len = length;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
defect_list_len = 0;
if (cdb->byte2 & SF_FMTDATA) {
if (cdb->byte2 & SF_LONGLIST) {
struct scsi_format_header_long *header;
header = (struct scsi_format_header_long *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
defect_list_len = scsi_4btoul(header->defect_list_len);
if (defect_list_len != 0) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
goto bailout;
}
} else {
struct scsi_format_header_short *header;
header = (struct scsi_format_header_short *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
defect_list_len = scsi_2btoul(header->defect_list_len);
if (defect_list_len != 0) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
goto bailout;
}
}
}
/*
* The format command will clear out the "Medium format corrupted"
* status if set by the configuration code. That status is really
* just a way to notify the host that we have lost the media, and
* get them to issue a command that will basically make them think
* they're blowing away the media.
*/
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_INOPERABLE;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
bailout:
if (ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) {
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
}
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_read_buffer(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint64_t buffer_offset;
uint32_t len;
uint8_t byte2;
static uint8_t descr[4];
static uint8_t echo_descr[4] = { 0 };
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_read_buffer\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case READ_BUFFER: {
struct scsi_read_buffer *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_read_buffer *)ctsio->cdb;
buffer_offset = scsi_3btoul(cdb->offset);
len = scsi_3btoul(cdb->length);
byte2 = cdb->byte2;
break;
}
case READ_BUFFER_16: {
struct scsi_read_buffer_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_read_buffer_16 *)ctsio->cdb;
buffer_offset = scsi_8btou64(cdb->offset);
len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
byte2 = cdb->byte2;
break;
}
default: /* This shouldn't happen. */
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if ((byte2 & RWB_MODE) != RWB_MODE_DATA &&
(byte2 & RWB_MODE) != RWB_MODE_ECHO_DESCR &&
(byte2 & RWB_MODE) != RWB_MODE_DESCR) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 1,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 4);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
if (buffer_offset > CTL_WRITE_BUFFER_SIZE ||
buffer_offset + len > CTL_WRITE_BUFFER_SIZE) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 6,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
if ((byte2 & RWB_MODE) == RWB_MODE_DESCR) {
descr[0] = 0;
scsi_ulto3b(CTL_WRITE_BUFFER_SIZE, &descr[1]);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = descr;
len = min(len, sizeof(descr));
} else if ((byte2 & RWB_MODE) == RWB_MODE_ECHO_DESCR) {
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = echo_descr;
len = min(len, sizeof(echo_descr));
} else {
if (lun->write_buffer == NULL) {
lun->write_buffer = malloc(CTL_WRITE_BUFFER_SIZE,
M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
}
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = lun->write_buffer + buffer_offset;
}
ctsio->kern_data_len = len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = len;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_write_buffer(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_write_buffer *cdb;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int buffer_offset, len;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_write_buffer\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_buffer *)ctsio->cdb;
if ((cdb->byte2 & RWB_MODE) != RWB_MODE_DATA) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 1,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 4);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
len = scsi_3btoul(cdb->length);
buffer_offset = scsi_3btoul(cdb->offset);
if (buffer_offset + len > CTL_WRITE_BUFFER_SIZE) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 6,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* If we've got a kernel request that hasn't been malloced yet,
* malloc it and tell the caller the data buffer is here.
*/
if ((ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0) {
if (lun->write_buffer == NULL) {
lun->write_buffer = malloc(CTL_WRITE_BUFFER_SIZE,
M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
}
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = lun->write_buffer + buffer_offset;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->kern_data_len = len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = len;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_write_same(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_lba_len_flags *lbalen;
uint64_t lba;
uint32_t num_blocks;
int len, retval;
uint8_t byte2;
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_write_same\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case WRITE_SAME_10: {
struct scsi_write_same_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_same_10 *)ctsio->cdb;
lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
byte2 = cdb->byte2;
break;
}
case WRITE_SAME_16: {
struct scsi_write_same_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_same_16 *)ctsio->cdb;
lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
byte2 = cdb->byte2;
break;
}
default:
/*
* We got a command we don't support. This shouldn't
* happen, commands should be filtered out above us.
*/
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
/* NDOB and ANCHOR flags can be used only together with UNMAP */
if ((byte2 & SWS_UNMAP) == 0 &&
(byte2 & (SWS_NDOB | SWS_ANCHOR)) != 0) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio, /*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1, /*field*/ 1, /*bit_valid*/ 1, /*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* The first check is to make sure we're in bounds, the second
* check is to catch wrap-around problems. If the lba + num blocks
* is less than the lba, then we've wrapped around and the block
* range is invalid anyway.
*/
if (((lba + num_blocks) > (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1))
|| ((lba + num_blocks) < lba)) {
ctl_set_lba_out_of_range(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/* Zero number of blocks means "to the last logical block" */
if (num_blocks == 0) {
if ((lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1) - lba > UINT32_MAX) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 0,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 0,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
num_blocks = (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1) - lba;
}
len = lun->be_lun->blocksize;
/*
* If we've got a kernel request that hasn't been malloced yet,
* malloc it and tell the caller the data buffer is here.
*/
if ((byte2 & SWS_NDOB) == 0 &&
(ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0) {
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);;
ctsio->kern_data_len = len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = len;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
lbalen = (struct ctl_lba_len_flags *)&ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
lbalen->lba = lba;
lbalen->len = num_blocks;
lbalen->flags = byte2;
retval = lun->backend->config_write((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
int
ctl_unmap(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct scsi_unmap *cdb;
struct ctl_ptr_len_flags *ptrlen;
struct scsi_unmap_header *hdr;
struct scsi_unmap_desc *buf, *end, *endnz, *range;
uint64_t lba;
uint32_t num_blocks;
int len, retval;
uint8_t byte2;
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_unmap\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
cdb = (struct scsi_unmap *)ctsio->cdb;
len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
byte2 = cdb->byte2;
/*
* If we've got a kernel request that hasn't been malloced yet,
* malloc it and tell the caller the data buffer is here.
*/
if ((ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0) {
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);;
ctsio->kern_data_len = len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = len;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
len = ctsio->kern_total_len - ctsio->kern_data_resid;
hdr = (struct scsi_unmap_header *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
if (len < sizeof (*hdr) ||
len < (scsi_2btoul(hdr->length) + sizeof(hdr->length)) ||
len < (scsi_2btoul(hdr->desc_length) + sizeof (*hdr)) ||
scsi_2btoul(hdr->desc_length) % sizeof(*buf) != 0) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 0,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ 0,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
goto done;
}
len = scsi_2btoul(hdr->desc_length);
buf = (struct scsi_unmap_desc *)(hdr + 1);
end = buf + len / sizeof(*buf);
endnz = buf;
for (range = buf; range < end; range++) {
lba = scsi_8btou64(range->lba);
num_blocks = scsi_4btoul(range->length);
if (((lba + num_blocks) > (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1))
|| ((lba + num_blocks) < lba)) {
ctl_set_lba_out_of_range(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
if (num_blocks != 0)
endnz = range + 1;
}
/*
* Block backend can not handle zero last range.
* Filter it out and return if there is nothing left.
*/
len = (uint8_t *)endnz - (uint8_t *)buf;
if (len == 0) {
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
goto done;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
ptrlen = (struct ctl_ptr_len_flags *)
&ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
ptrlen->ptr = (void *)buf;
ptrlen->len = len;
ptrlen->flags = byte2;
ctl_check_blocked(lun);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
retval = lun->backend->config_write((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
done:
if (ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) {
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
}
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Note that this function currently doesn't actually do anything inside
* CTL to enforce things if the DQue bit is turned on.
*
* Also note that this function can't be used in the default case, because
* the DQue bit isn't set in the changeable mask for the control mode page
* anyway. This is just here as an example for how to implement a page
* handler, and a placeholder in case we want to allow the user to turn
* tagged queueing on and off.
*
* The D_SENSE bit handling is functional, however, and will turn
* descriptor sense on and off for a given LUN.
*/
int
ctl_control_page_handler(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
struct ctl_page_index *page_index, uint8_t *page_ptr)
{
struct scsi_control_page *current_cp, *saved_cp, *user_cp;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int set_ua;
uint32_t initidx;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
set_ua = 0;
user_cp = (struct scsi_control_page *)page_ptr;
current_cp = (struct scsi_control_page *)
(page_index->page_data + (page_index->page_len *
CTL_PAGE_CURRENT));
saved_cp = (struct scsi_control_page *)
(page_index->page_data + (page_index->page_len *
CTL_PAGE_SAVED));
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (((current_cp->rlec & SCP_DSENSE) == 0)
&& ((user_cp->rlec & SCP_DSENSE) != 0)) {
/*
* Descriptor sense is currently turned off and the user
* wants to turn it on.
*/
current_cp->rlec |= SCP_DSENSE;
saved_cp->rlec |= SCP_DSENSE;
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_SENSE_DESC;
set_ua = 1;
} else if (((current_cp->rlec & SCP_DSENSE) != 0)
&& ((user_cp->rlec & SCP_DSENSE) == 0)) {
/*
* Descriptor sense is currently turned on, and the user
* wants to turn it off.
*/
current_cp->rlec &= ~SCP_DSENSE;
saved_cp->rlec &= ~SCP_DSENSE;
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_SENSE_DESC;
set_ua = 1;
}
if ((current_cp->queue_flags & SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK) !=
(user_cp->queue_flags & SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK)) {
current_cp->queue_flags &= ~SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK;
current_cp->queue_flags |= user_cp->queue_flags & SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK;
saved_cp->queue_flags &= ~SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK;
saved_cp->queue_flags |= user_cp->queue_flags & SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK;
set_ua = 1;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if ((current_cp->eca_and_aen & SCP_SWP) !=
(user_cp->eca_and_aen & SCP_SWP)) {
current_cp->eca_and_aen &= ~SCP_SWP;
current_cp->eca_and_aen |= user_cp->eca_and_aen & SCP_SWP;
saved_cp->eca_and_aen &= ~SCP_SWP;
saved_cp->eca_and_aen |= user_cp->eca_and_aen & SCP_SWP;
set_ua = 1;
}
if (set_ua != 0)
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, initidx, CTL_UA_MODE_CHANGE);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (set_ua) {
ctl_isc_announce_mode(lun,
ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus),
page_index->page_code, page_index->subpage);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
int
ctl_caching_sp_handler(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
struct ctl_page_index *page_index, uint8_t *page_ptr)
{
struct scsi_caching_page *current_cp, *saved_cp, *user_cp;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int set_ua;
uint32_t initidx;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
set_ua = 0;
user_cp = (struct scsi_caching_page *)page_ptr;
current_cp = (struct scsi_caching_page *)
(page_index->page_data + (page_index->page_len *
CTL_PAGE_CURRENT));
saved_cp = (struct scsi_caching_page *)
(page_index->page_data + (page_index->page_len *
CTL_PAGE_SAVED));
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
if ((current_cp->flags1 & (SCP_WCE | SCP_RCD)) !=
(user_cp->flags1 & (SCP_WCE | SCP_RCD))) {
current_cp->flags1 &= ~(SCP_WCE | SCP_RCD);
current_cp->flags1 |= user_cp->flags1 & (SCP_WCE | SCP_RCD);
saved_cp->flags1 &= ~(SCP_WCE | SCP_RCD);
saved_cp->flags1 |= user_cp->flags1 & (SCP_WCE | SCP_RCD);
set_ua = 1;
}
if (set_ua != 0)
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, initidx, CTL_UA_MODE_CHANGE);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (set_ua) {
ctl_isc_announce_mode(lun,
ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus),
page_index->page_code, page_index->subpage);
}
return (0);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int
ctl_debugconf_sp_select_handler(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
struct ctl_page_index *page_index,
uint8_t *page_ptr)
{
uint8_t *c;
int i;
c = ((struct copan_debugconf_subpage *)page_ptr)->ctl_time_io_secs;
ctl_time_io_secs =
(c[0] << 8) |
(c[1] << 0) |
0;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("set ctl_time_io_secs to %d\n", ctl_time_io_secs));
printf("set ctl_time_io_secs to %d\n", ctl_time_io_secs);
printf("page data:");
for (i=0; i<8; i++)
printf(" %.2x",page_ptr[i]);
printf("\n");
return (0);
}
int
ctl_debugconf_sp_sense_handler(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
struct ctl_page_index *page_index,
int pc)
{
struct copan_debugconf_subpage *page;
page = (struct copan_debugconf_subpage *)page_index->page_data +
(page_index->page_len * pc);
switch (pc) {
case SMS_PAGE_CTRL_CHANGEABLE >> 6:
case SMS_PAGE_CTRL_DEFAULT >> 6:
case SMS_PAGE_CTRL_SAVED >> 6:
/*
* We don't update the changable or default bits for this page.
*/
break;
case SMS_PAGE_CTRL_CURRENT >> 6:
page->ctl_time_io_secs[0] = ctl_time_io_secs >> 8;
page->ctl_time_io_secs[1] = ctl_time_io_secs >> 0;
break;
default:
#ifdef NEEDTOPORT
EPRINT(0, "Invalid PC %d!!", pc);
#endif /* NEEDTOPORT */
break;
}
return (0);
}
static int
ctl_do_mode_select(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct scsi_mode_page_header *page_header;
struct ctl_page_index *page_index;
struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio;
int control_dev, page_len;
int page_len_offset, page_len_size;
union ctl_modepage_info *modepage_info;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int *len_left, *len_used;
int retval, i;
ctsio = &io->scsiio;
page_index = NULL;
page_len = 0;
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
if (lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_DIRECT)
control_dev = 1;
else
control_dev = 0;
modepage_info = (union ctl_modepage_info *)
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_MODEPAGE].bytes;
len_left = &modepage_info->header.len_left;
len_used = &modepage_info->header.len_used;
do_next_page:
page_header = (struct scsi_mode_page_header *)
(ctsio->kern_data_ptr + *len_used);
if (*len_left == 0) {
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
} else if (*len_left < sizeof(struct scsi_mode_page_header)) {
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_param_len_error(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
} else if ((page_header->page_code & SMPH_SPF)
&& (*len_left < sizeof(struct scsi_mode_page_header_sp))) {
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_param_len_error(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* XXX KDM should we do something with the block descriptor?
*/
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
if ((control_dev != 0)
&& (lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_flags &
CTL_PAGE_FLAG_DISK_ONLY))
continue;
if ((lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code & SMPH_PC_MASK) !=
(page_header->page_code & SMPH_PC_MASK))
continue;
/*
* If neither page has a subpage code, then we've got a
* match.
*/
if (((lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code & SMPH_SPF) == 0)
&& ((page_header->page_code & SMPH_SPF) == 0)) {
page_index = &lun->mode_pages.index[i];
page_len = page_header->page_length;
break;
}
/*
* If both pages have subpages, then the subpage numbers
* have to match.
*/
if ((lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code & SMPH_SPF)
&& (page_header->page_code & SMPH_SPF)) {
struct scsi_mode_page_header_sp *sph;
sph = (struct scsi_mode_page_header_sp *)page_header;
if (lun->mode_pages.index[i].subpage ==
sph->subpage) {
page_index = &lun->mode_pages.index[i];
page_len = scsi_2btoul(sph->page_length);
break;
}
}
}
/*
* If we couldn't find the page, or if we don't have a mode select
* handler for it, send back an error to the user.
*/
if ((page_index == NULL)
|| (page_index->select_handler == NULL)) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ *len_used,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
if (page_index->page_code & SMPH_SPF) {
page_len_offset = 2;
page_len_size = 2;
} else {
page_len_size = 1;
page_len_offset = 1;
}
/*
* If the length the initiator gives us isn't the one we specify in
* the mode page header, or if they didn't specify enough data in
* the CDB to avoid truncating this page, kick out the request.
*/
if ((page_len != (page_index->page_len - page_len_offset -
page_len_size))
|| (*len_left < page_index->page_len)) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ *len_used + page_len_offset,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* Run through the mode page, checking to make sure that the bits
* the user changed are actually legal for him to change.
*/
for (i = 0; i < page_index->page_len; i++) {
uint8_t *user_byte, *change_mask, *current_byte;
int bad_bit;
int j;
user_byte = (uint8_t *)page_header + i;
change_mask = page_index->page_data +
(page_index->page_len * CTL_PAGE_CHANGEABLE) + i;
current_byte = page_index->page_data +
(page_index->page_len * CTL_PAGE_CURRENT) + i;
/*
* Check to see whether the user set any bits in this byte
* that he is not allowed to set.
*/
if ((*user_byte & ~(*change_mask)) ==
(*current_byte & ~(*change_mask)))
continue;
/*
* Go through bit by bit to determine which one is illegal.
*/
bad_bit = 0;
for (j = 7; j >= 0; j--) {
if ((((1 << i) & ~(*change_mask)) & *user_byte) !=
(((1 << i) & ~(*change_mask)) & *current_byte)) {
bad_bit = i;
break;
}
}
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ *len_used + i,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ bad_bit);
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* Decrement these before we call the page handler, since we may
* end up getting called back one way or another before the handler
* returns to this context.
*/
*len_left -= page_index->page_len;
*len_used += page_index->page_len;
retval = page_index->select_handler(ctsio, page_index,
(uint8_t *)page_header);
/*
* If the page handler returns CTL_RETVAL_QUEUED, then we need to
* wait until this queued command completes to finish processing
* the mode page. If it returns anything other than
* CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE (e.g. CTL_RETVAL_ERROR), then it should have
* already set the sense information, freed the data pointer, and
* completed the io for us.
*/
if (retval != CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE)
goto bailout_no_done;
/*
* If the initiator sent us more than one page, parse the next one.
*/
if (*len_left > 0)
goto do_next_page;
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
bailout_no_done:
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_mode_select(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
int param_len, pf, sp;
int header_size, bd_len;
int len_left, len_used;
struct ctl_page_index *page_index;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int control_dev, page_len;
union ctl_modepage_info *modepage_info;
int retval;
pf = 0;
sp = 0;
page_len = 0;
len_used = 0;
len_left = 0;
retval = 0;
bd_len = 0;
page_index = NULL;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
if (lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_DIRECT)
control_dev = 1;
else
control_dev = 0;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case MODE_SELECT_6: {
struct scsi_mode_select_6 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_mode_select_6 *)ctsio->cdb;
pf = (cdb->byte2 & SMS_PF) ? 1 : 0;
sp = (cdb->byte2 & SMS_SP) ? 1 : 0;
param_len = cdb->length;
header_size = sizeof(struct scsi_mode_header_6);
break;
}
case MODE_SELECT_10: {
struct scsi_mode_select_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_mode_select_10 *)ctsio->cdb;
pf = (cdb->byte2 & SMS_PF) ? 1 : 0;
sp = (cdb->byte2 & SMS_SP) ? 1 : 0;
param_len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
header_size = sizeof(struct scsi_mode_header_10);
break;
}
default:
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
/*
* From SPC-3:
* "A parameter list length of zero indicates that the Data-Out Buffer
* shall be empty. This condition shall not be considered as an error."
*/
if (param_len == 0) {
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* Since we'll hit this the first time through, prior to
* allocation, we don't need to free a data buffer here.
*/
if (param_len < header_size) {
ctl_set_param_len_error(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* Allocate the data buffer and grab the user's data. In theory,
* we shouldn't have to sanity check the parameter list length here
* because the maximum size is 64K. We should be able to malloc
* that much without too many problems.
*/
if ((ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0) {
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(param_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
ctsio->kern_data_len = param_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = param_len;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case MODE_SELECT_6: {
struct scsi_mode_header_6 *mh6;
mh6 = (struct scsi_mode_header_6 *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
bd_len = mh6->blk_desc_len;
break;
}
case MODE_SELECT_10: {
struct scsi_mode_header_10 *mh10;
mh10 = (struct scsi_mode_header_10 *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
bd_len = scsi_2btoul(mh10->blk_desc_len);
break;
}
default:
panic("Invalid CDB type %#x", ctsio->cdb[0]);
break;
}
if (param_len < (header_size + bd_len)) {
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_param_len_error(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* Set the IO_CONT flag, so that if this I/O gets passed to
* ctl_config_write_done(), it'll get passed back to
* ctl_do_mode_select() for further processing, or completion if
* we're all done.
*/
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IO_CONT;
ctsio->io_cont = ctl_do_mode_select;
modepage_info = (union ctl_modepage_info *)
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_MODEPAGE].bytes;
memset(modepage_info, 0, sizeof(*modepage_info));
len_left = param_len - header_size - bd_len;
len_used = header_size + bd_len;
modepage_info->header.len_left = len_left;
modepage_info->header.len_used = len_used;
return (ctl_do_mode_select((union ctl_io *)ctsio));
}
int
ctl_mode_sense(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int pc, page_code, dbd, llba, subpage;
int alloc_len, page_len, header_len, total_len;
struct scsi_mode_block_descr *block_desc;
struct ctl_page_index *page_index;
int control_dev;
dbd = 0;
llba = 0;
block_desc = NULL;
page_index = NULL;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_mode_sense\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
if (lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_DIRECT)
control_dev = 1;
else
control_dev = 0;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case MODE_SENSE_6: {
struct scsi_mode_sense_6 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_mode_sense_6 *)ctsio->cdb;
header_len = sizeof(struct scsi_mode_hdr_6);
if (cdb->byte2 & SMS_DBD)
dbd = 1;
else
header_len += sizeof(struct scsi_mode_block_descr);
pc = (cdb->page & SMS_PAGE_CTRL_MASK) >> 6;
page_code = cdb->page & SMS_PAGE_CODE;
subpage = cdb->subpage;
alloc_len = cdb->length;
break;
}
case MODE_SENSE_10: {
struct scsi_mode_sense_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_mode_sense_10 *)ctsio->cdb;
header_len = sizeof(struct scsi_mode_hdr_10);
if (cdb->byte2 & SMS_DBD)
dbd = 1;
else
header_len += sizeof(struct scsi_mode_block_descr);
if (cdb->byte2 & SMS10_LLBAA)
llba = 1;
pc = (cdb->page & SMS_PAGE_CTRL_MASK) >> 6;
page_code = cdb->page & SMS_PAGE_CODE;
subpage = cdb->subpage;
alloc_len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
default:
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
/*
* We have to make a first pass through to calculate the size of
* the pages that match the user's query. Then we allocate enough
* memory to hold it, and actually copy the data into the buffer.
*/
switch (page_code) {
case SMS_ALL_PAGES_PAGE: {
int i;
page_len = 0;
/*
* At the moment, values other than 0 and 0xff here are
* reserved according to SPC-3.
*/
if ((subpage != SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0)
&& (subpage != SMS_SUBPAGE_ALL)) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 3,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
if ((control_dev != 0)
&& (lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_flags &
CTL_PAGE_FLAG_DISK_ONLY))
continue;
/*
* We don't use this subpage if the user didn't
* request all subpages.
*/
if ((lun->mode_pages.index[i].subpage != 0)
&& (subpage == SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0))
continue;
#if 0
printf("found page %#x len %d\n",
lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code &
SMPH_PC_MASK,
lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_len);
#endif
page_len += lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_len;
}
break;
}
default: {
int i;
page_len = 0;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
/* Look for the right page code */
if ((lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code &
SMPH_PC_MASK) != page_code)
continue;
/* Look for the right subpage or the subpage wildcard*/
if ((lun->mode_pages.index[i].subpage != subpage)
&& (subpage != SMS_SUBPAGE_ALL))
continue;
/* Make sure the page is supported for this dev type */
if ((control_dev != 0)
&& (lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_flags &
CTL_PAGE_FLAG_DISK_ONLY))
continue;
#if 0
printf("found page %#x len %d\n",
lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_code &
SMPH_PC_MASK,
lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_len);
#endif
page_len += lun->mode_pages.index[i].page_len;
}
if (page_len == 0) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 5);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
break;
}
}
total_len = header_len + page_len;
#if 0
printf("header_len = %d, page_len = %d, total_len = %d\n",
header_len, page_len, total_len);
#endif
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(total_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
if (total_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - total_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = total_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = total_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case MODE_SENSE_6: {
struct scsi_mode_hdr_6 *header;
header = (struct scsi_mode_hdr_6 *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
header->datalen = MIN(total_len - 1, 254);
if (control_dev == 0) {
header->dev_specific = 0x10; /* DPOFUA */
if ((lun->be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_READONLY) ||
(lun->mode_pages.control_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT]
.eca_and_aen & SCP_SWP) != 0)
header->dev_specific |= 0x80; /* WP */
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (dbd)
header->block_descr_len = 0;
else
header->block_descr_len =
sizeof(struct scsi_mode_block_descr);
block_desc = (struct scsi_mode_block_descr *)&header[1];
break;
}
case MODE_SENSE_10: {
struct scsi_mode_hdr_10 *header;
int datalen;
header = (struct scsi_mode_hdr_10 *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
datalen = MIN(total_len - 2, 65533);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
scsi_ulto2b(datalen, header->datalen);
if (control_dev == 0) {
header->dev_specific = 0x10; /* DPOFUA */
if ((lun->be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_READONLY) ||
(lun->mode_pages.control_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT]
.eca_and_aen & SCP_SWP) != 0)
header->dev_specific |= 0x80; /* WP */
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (dbd)
scsi_ulto2b(0, header->block_descr_len);
else
scsi_ulto2b(sizeof(struct scsi_mode_block_descr),
header->block_descr_len);
block_desc = (struct scsi_mode_block_descr *)&header[1];
break;
}
default:
panic("invalid CDB type %#x", ctsio->cdb[0]);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
/*
* If we've got a disk, use its blocksize in the block
* descriptor. Otherwise, just set it to 0.
*/
if (dbd == 0) {
if (control_dev == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
scsi_ulto3b(lun->be_lun->blocksize,
block_desc->block_len);
else
scsi_ulto3b(0, block_desc->block_len);
}
switch (page_code) {
case SMS_ALL_PAGES_PAGE: {
int i, data_used;
data_used = header_len;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
struct ctl_page_index *page_index;
page_index = &lun->mode_pages.index[i];
if ((control_dev != 0)
&& (page_index->page_flags &
CTL_PAGE_FLAG_DISK_ONLY))
continue;
/*
* We don't use this subpage if the user didn't
* request all subpages. We already checked (above)
* to make sure the user only specified a subpage
* of 0 or 0xff in the SMS_ALL_PAGES_PAGE case.
*/
if ((page_index->subpage != 0)
&& (subpage == SMS_SUBPAGE_PAGE_0))
continue;
/*
* Call the handler, if it exists, to update the
* page to the latest values.
*/
if (page_index->sense_handler != NULL)
page_index->sense_handler(ctsio, page_index,pc);
memcpy(ctsio->kern_data_ptr + data_used,
page_index->page_data +
(page_index->page_len * pc),
page_index->page_len);
data_used += page_index->page_len;
}
break;
}
default: {
int i, data_used;
data_used = header_len;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_MODE_PAGES; i++) {
struct ctl_page_index *page_index;
page_index = &lun->mode_pages.index[i];
/* Look for the right page code */
if ((page_index->page_code & SMPH_PC_MASK) != page_code)
continue;
/* Look for the right subpage or the subpage wildcard*/
if ((page_index->subpage != subpage)
&& (subpage != SMS_SUBPAGE_ALL))
continue;
/* Make sure the page is supported for this dev type */
if ((control_dev != 0)
&& (page_index->page_flags &
CTL_PAGE_FLAG_DISK_ONLY))
continue;
/*
* Call the handler, if it exists, to update the
* page to the latest values.
*/
if (page_index->sense_handler != NULL)
page_index->sense_handler(ctsio, page_index,pc);
memcpy(ctsio->kern_data_ptr + data_used,
page_index->page_data +
(page_index->page_len * pc),
page_index->page_len);
data_used += page_index->page_len;
}
break;
}
}
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_lbp_log_sense_handler(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
struct ctl_page_index *page_index,
int pc)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct scsi_log_param_header *phdr;
uint8_t *data;
uint64_t val;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
data = page_index->page_data;
if (lun->backend->lun_attr != NULL &&
(val = lun->backend->lun_attr(lun->be_lun->be_lun, "blocksavail"))
!= UINT64_MAX) {
phdr = (struct scsi_log_param_header *)data;
scsi_ulto2b(0x0001, phdr->param_code);
phdr->param_control = SLP_LBIN | SLP_LP;
phdr->param_len = 8;
data = (uint8_t *)(phdr + 1);
scsi_ulto4b(val >> CTL_LBP_EXPONENT, data);
data[4] = 0x02; /* per-pool */
data += phdr->param_len;
}
if (lun->backend->lun_attr != NULL &&
(val = lun->backend->lun_attr(lun->be_lun->be_lun, "blocksused"))
!= UINT64_MAX) {
phdr = (struct scsi_log_param_header *)data;
scsi_ulto2b(0x0002, phdr->param_code);
phdr->param_control = SLP_LBIN | SLP_LP;
phdr->param_len = 8;
data = (uint8_t *)(phdr + 1);
scsi_ulto4b(val >> CTL_LBP_EXPONENT, data);
data[4] = 0x01; /* per-LUN */
data += phdr->param_len;
}
if (lun->backend->lun_attr != NULL &&
(val = lun->backend->lun_attr(lun->be_lun->be_lun, "poolblocksavail"))
!= UINT64_MAX) {
phdr = (struct scsi_log_param_header *)data;
scsi_ulto2b(0x00f1, phdr->param_code);
phdr->param_control = SLP_LBIN | SLP_LP;
phdr->param_len = 8;
data = (uint8_t *)(phdr + 1);
scsi_ulto4b(val >> CTL_LBP_EXPONENT, data);
data[4] = 0x02; /* per-pool */
data += phdr->param_len;
}
if (lun->backend->lun_attr != NULL &&
(val = lun->backend->lun_attr(lun->be_lun->be_lun, "poolblocksused"))
!= UINT64_MAX) {
phdr = (struct scsi_log_param_header *)data;
scsi_ulto2b(0x00f2, phdr->param_code);
phdr->param_control = SLP_LBIN | SLP_LP;
phdr->param_len = 8;
data = (uint8_t *)(phdr + 1);
scsi_ulto4b(val >> CTL_LBP_EXPONENT, data);
data[4] = 0x02; /* per-pool */
data += phdr->param_len;
}
page_index->page_len = data - page_index->page_data;
return (0);
}
int
ctl_sap_log_sense_handler(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio,
struct ctl_page_index *page_index,
int pc)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct stat_page *data;
uint64_t rn, wn, rb, wb;
struct bintime rt, wt;
int i;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
data = (struct stat_page *)page_index->page_data;
scsi_ulto2b(SLP_SAP, data->sap.hdr.param_code);
data->sap.hdr.param_control = SLP_LBIN;
data->sap.hdr.param_len = sizeof(struct scsi_log_stat_and_perf) -
sizeof(struct scsi_log_param_header);
rn = wn = rb = wb = 0;
bintime_clear(&rt);
bintime_clear(&wt);
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_PORTS; i++) {
rn += lun->stats.ports[i].operations[CTL_STATS_READ];
wn += lun->stats.ports[i].operations[CTL_STATS_WRITE];
rb += lun->stats.ports[i].bytes[CTL_STATS_READ];
wb += lun->stats.ports[i].bytes[CTL_STATS_WRITE];
bintime_add(&rt, &lun->stats.ports[i].time[CTL_STATS_READ]);
bintime_add(&wt, &lun->stats.ports[i].time[CTL_STATS_WRITE]);
}
scsi_u64to8b(rn, data->sap.read_num);
scsi_u64to8b(wn, data->sap.write_num);
if (lun->stats.blocksize > 0) {
scsi_u64to8b(wb / lun->stats.blocksize,
data->sap.recvieved_lba);
scsi_u64to8b(rb / lun->stats.blocksize,
data->sap.transmitted_lba);
}
scsi_u64to8b((uint64_t)rt.sec * 1000 + rt.frac / (UINT64_MAX / 1000),
data->sap.read_int);
scsi_u64to8b((uint64_t)wt.sec * 1000 + wt.frac / (UINT64_MAX / 1000),
data->sap.write_int);
scsi_u64to8b(0, data->sap.weighted_num);
scsi_u64to8b(0, data->sap.weighted_int);
scsi_ulto2b(SLP_IT, data->it.hdr.param_code);
data->it.hdr.param_control = SLP_LBIN;
data->it.hdr.param_len = sizeof(struct scsi_log_idle_time) -
sizeof(struct scsi_log_param_header);
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
scsi_u64to8b(lun->idle_time / SBT_1MS, data->it.idle_int);
#endif
scsi_ulto2b(SLP_TI, data->ti.hdr.param_code);
data->it.hdr.param_control = SLP_LBIN;
data->ti.hdr.param_len = sizeof(struct scsi_log_time_interval) -
sizeof(struct scsi_log_param_header);
scsi_ulto4b(3, data->ti.exponent);
scsi_ulto4b(1, data->ti.integer);
page_index->page_len = sizeof(*data);
return (0);
}
int
ctl_log_sense(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int i, pc, page_code, subpage;
int alloc_len, total_len;
struct ctl_page_index *page_index;
struct scsi_log_sense *cdb;
struct scsi_log_header *header;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_log_sense\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
cdb = (struct scsi_log_sense *)ctsio->cdb;
pc = (cdb->page & SLS_PAGE_CTRL_MASK) >> 6;
page_code = cdb->page & SLS_PAGE_CODE;
subpage = cdb->subpage;
alloc_len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
page_index = NULL;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_LOG_PAGES; i++) {
page_index = &lun->log_pages.index[i];
/* Look for the right page code */
if ((page_index->page_code & SL_PAGE_CODE) != page_code)
continue;
/* Look for the right subpage or the subpage wildcard*/
if (page_index->subpage != subpage)
continue;
break;
}
if (i >= CTL_NUM_LOG_PAGES) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_log_header) + page_index->page_len;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(total_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
if (total_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - total_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = total_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = total_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
header = (struct scsi_log_header *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
header->page = page_index->page_code;
if (page_index->subpage) {
header->page |= SL_SPF;
header->subpage = page_index->subpage;
}
scsi_ulto2b(page_index->page_len, header->datalen);
/*
* Call the handler, if it exists, to update the
* page to the latest values.
*/
if (page_index->sense_handler != NULL)
page_index->sense_handler(ctsio, page_index, pc);
memcpy(header + 1, page_index->page_data, page_index->page_len);
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int
ctl_read_capacity(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_read_capacity *cdb;
struct scsi_read_capacity_data *data;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t lba;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_read_capacity\n"));
cdb = (struct scsi_read_capacity *)ctsio->cdb;
lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
if (((cdb->pmi & SRC_PMI) == 0)
&& (lba != 0)) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(sizeof(*data), M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
data = (struct scsi_read_capacity_data *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = sizeof(*data);
ctsio->kern_total_len = sizeof(*data);
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* If the maximum LBA is greater than 0xfffffffe, the user must
* issue a SERVICE ACTION IN (16) command, with the read capacity
* serivce action set.
*/
if (lun->be_lun->maxlba > 0xfffffffe)
scsi_ulto4b(0xffffffff, data->addr);
else
scsi_ulto4b(lun->be_lun->maxlba, data->addr);
/*
* XXX KDM this may not be 512 bytes...
*/
scsi_ulto4b(lun->be_lun->blocksize, data->length);
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_read_capacity_16(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_read_capacity_16 *cdb;
struct scsi_read_capacity_data_long *data;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint64_t lba;
uint32_t alloc_len;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_read_capacity_16\n"));
cdb = (struct scsi_read_capacity_16 *)ctsio->cdb;
alloc_len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->alloc_len);
lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
if ((cdb->reladr & SRC16_PMI)
&& (lba != 0)) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(sizeof(*data), M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
data = (struct scsi_read_capacity_data_long *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
if (sizeof(*data) < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - sizeof(*data);
ctsio->kern_data_len = sizeof(*data);
ctsio->kern_total_len = sizeof(*data);
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
scsi_u64to8b(lun->be_lun->maxlba, data->addr);
/* XXX KDM this may not be 512 bytes... */
scsi_ulto4b(lun->be_lun->blocksize, data->length);
data->prot_lbppbe = lun->be_lun->pblockexp & SRC16_LBPPBE;
scsi_ulto2b(lun->be_lun->pblockoff & SRC16_LALBA_A, data->lalba_lbp);
if (lun->be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_UNMAP)
data->lalba_lbp[0] |= SRC16_LBPME | SRC16_LBPRZ;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_get_lba_status(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_get_lba_status *cdb;
struct scsi_get_lba_status_data *data;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_lba_len_flags *lbalen;
uint64_t lba;
uint32_t alloc_len, total_len;
int retval;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_get_lba_status\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
cdb = (struct scsi_get_lba_status *)ctsio->cdb;
lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
alloc_len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->alloc_len);
if (lba > lun->be_lun->maxlba) {
ctl_set_lba_out_of_range(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
total_len = sizeof(*data) + sizeof(data->descr[0]);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(total_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
data = (struct scsi_get_lba_status_data *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
if (total_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - total_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = total_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = total_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/* Fill dummy data in case backend can't tell anything. */
scsi_ulto4b(4 + sizeof(data->descr[0]), data->length);
scsi_u64to8b(lba, data->descr[0].addr);
scsi_ulto4b(MIN(UINT32_MAX, lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1 - lba),
data->descr[0].length);
data->descr[0].status = 0; /* Mapped or unknown. */
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
lbalen = (struct ctl_lba_len_flags *)&ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
lbalen->lba = lba;
lbalen->len = total_len;
lbalen->flags = 0;
retval = lun->backend->config_read((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_read_defect(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_read_defect_data_10 *ccb10;
struct scsi_read_defect_data_12 *ccb12;
struct scsi_read_defect_data_hdr_10 *data10;
struct scsi_read_defect_data_hdr_12 *data12;
uint32_t alloc_len, data_len;
uint8_t format;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_read_defect\n"));
if (ctsio->cdb[0] == READ_DEFECT_DATA_10) {
ccb10 = (struct scsi_read_defect_data_10 *)&ctsio->cdb;
format = ccb10->format;
alloc_len = scsi_2btoul(ccb10->alloc_length);
data_len = sizeof(*data10);
} else {
ccb12 = (struct scsi_read_defect_data_12 *)&ctsio->cdb;
format = ccb12->format;
alloc_len = scsi_4btoul(ccb12->alloc_length);
data_len = sizeof(*data12);
}
if (alloc_len == 0) {
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(data_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
if (data_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - data_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = data_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = data_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (ctsio->cdb[0] == READ_DEFECT_DATA_10) {
data10 = (struct scsi_read_defect_data_hdr_10 *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
data10->format = format;
scsi_ulto2b(0, data10->length);
} else {
data12 = (struct scsi_read_defect_data_hdr_12 *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
data12->format = format;
scsi_ulto2b(0, data12->generation);
scsi_ulto4b(0, data12->length);
}
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int
ctl_report_tagret_port_groups(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct scsi_maintenance_in *cdb;
int retval;
int alloc_len, ext, total_len = 0, g, pc, pg, gs, os;
int num_target_port_groups, num_target_ports;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct scsi_target_group_data *rtg_ptr;
struct scsi_target_group_data_extended *rtg_ext_ptr;
struct scsi_target_port_group_descriptor *tpg_desc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_report_tagret_port_groups\n"));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
cdb = (struct scsi_maintenance_in *)ctsio->cdb;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
switch (cdb->byte2 & STG_PDF_MASK) {
case STG_PDF_LENGTH:
ext = 0;
break;
case STG_PDF_EXTENDED:
ext = 1;
break;
default:
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 5);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return(retval);
}
if (softc->is_single)
num_target_port_groups = 1;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
else
num_target_port_groups = NUM_TARGET_PORT_GROUPS;
num_target_ports = 0;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
if ((port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) == 0)
continue;
if (ctl_lun_map_to_port(port, lun->lun) >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
num_target_ports++;
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (ext)
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_target_group_data_extended);
else
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_target_group_data);
total_len += sizeof(struct scsi_target_port_group_descriptor) *
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
num_target_port_groups +
sizeof(struct scsi_target_port_descriptor) * num_target_ports;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
alloc_len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(total_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (total_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - total_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = total_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = total_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
if (ext) {
rtg_ext_ptr = (struct scsi_target_group_data_extended *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
scsi_ulto4b(total_len - 4, rtg_ext_ptr->length);
rtg_ext_ptr->format_type = 0x10;
rtg_ext_ptr->implicit_transition_time = 0;
tpg_desc = &rtg_ext_ptr->groups[0];
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
rtg_ptr = (struct scsi_target_group_data *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
scsi_ulto4b(total_len - 4, rtg_ptr->length);
tpg_desc = &rtg_ptr->groups[0];
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
pg = softc->port_min / softc->port_cnt;
if (softc->ha_link == CTL_HA_LINK_OFFLINE)
gs = TPG_ASYMMETRIC_ACCESS_UNAVAILABLE;
else if (softc->ha_link == CTL_HA_LINK_UNKNOWN)
gs = TPG_ASYMMETRIC_ACCESS_TRANSITIONING;
else if (softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_ACT_STBY)
gs = TPG_ASYMMETRIC_ACCESS_STANDBY;
else
gs = TPG_ASYMMETRIC_ACCESS_NONOPTIMIZED;
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) {
os = gs;
gs = TPG_ASYMMETRIC_ACCESS_OPTIMIZED;
} else
os = TPG_ASYMMETRIC_ACCESS_OPTIMIZED;
for (g = 0; g < num_target_port_groups; g++) {
tpg_desc->pref_state = (g == pg) ? gs : os;
tpg_desc->support = TPG_AO_SUP | TPG_AN_SUP | TPG_S_SUP |
TPG_U_SUP | TPG_T_SUP;
scsi_ulto2b(g + 1, tpg_desc->target_port_group);
tpg_desc->status = TPG_IMPLICIT;
pc = 0;
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
if (port->targ_port < g * softc->port_cnt ||
port->targ_port >= (g + 1) * softc->port_cnt)
continue;
if ((port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) == 0)
continue;
if (ctl_lun_map_to_port(port, lun->lun) >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
scsi_ulto2b(port->targ_port, tpg_desc->descriptors[pc].
relative_target_port_identifier);
pc++;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
tpg_desc->target_port_count = pc;
tpg_desc = (struct scsi_target_port_group_descriptor *)
&tpg_desc->descriptors[pc];
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return(retval);
}
int
ctl_report_supported_opcodes(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes *cdb;
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry, *sentry;
struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_all *all;
struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_descr *descr;
struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_one *one;
int retval;
int alloc_len, total_len;
int opcode, service_action, i, j, num;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_report_supported_opcodes\n"));
cdb = (struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes *)ctsio->cdb;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
opcode = cdb->requested_opcode;
service_action = scsi_2btoul(cdb->requested_service_action);
switch (cdb->options & RSO_OPTIONS_MASK) {
case RSO_OPTIONS_ALL:
num = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) {
entry = &ctl_cmd_table[i];
if (entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_SA5) {
for (j = 0; j < 32; j++) {
sentry = &((const struct ctl_cmd_entry *)
entry->execute)[j];
if (ctl_cmd_applicable(
lun->be_lun->lun_type, sentry))
num++;
}
} else {
if (ctl_cmd_applicable(lun->be_lun->lun_type,
entry))
num++;
}
}
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_all) +
num * sizeof(struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_descr);
break;
case RSO_OPTIONS_OC:
if (ctl_cmd_table[opcode].flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_SA5) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 2);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_one) + 32;
break;
case RSO_OPTIONS_OC_SA:
if ((ctl_cmd_table[opcode].flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_SA5) == 0 ||
service_action >= 32) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 2);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_one) + 32;
break;
default:
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 2);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
alloc_len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(total_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (total_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - total_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = total_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = total_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
switch (cdb->options & RSO_OPTIONS_MASK) {
case RSO_OPTIONS_ALL:
all = (struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_all *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
num = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) {
entry = &ctl_cmd_table[i];
if (entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_SA5) {
for (j = 0; j < 32; j++) {
sentry = &((const struct ctl_cmd_entry *)
entry->execute)[j];
if (!ctl_cmd_applicable(
lun->be_lun->lun_type, sentry))
continue;
descr = &all->descr[num++];
descr->opcode = i;
scsi_ulto2b(j, descr->service_action);
descr->flags = RSO_SERVACTV;
scsi_ulto2b(sentry->length,
descr->cdb_length);
}
} else {
if (!ctl_cmd_applicable(lun->be_lun->lun_type,
entry))
continue;
descr = &all->descr[num++];
descr->opcode = i;
scsi_ulto2b(0, descr->service_action);
descr->flags = 0;
scsi_ulto2b(entry->length, descr->cdb_length);
}
}
scsi_ulto4b(
num * sizeof(struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_descr),
all->length);
break;
case RSO_OPTIONS_OC:
one = (struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_one *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
entry = &ctl_cmd_table[opcode];
goto fill_one;
case RSO_OPTIONS_OC_SA:
one = (struct scsi_report_supported_opcodes_one *)
ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
entry = &ctl_cmd_table[opcode];
entry = &((const struct ctl_cmd_entry *)
entry->execute)[service_action];
fill_one:
if (ctl_cmd_applicable(lun->be_lun->lun_type, entry)) {
one->support = 3;
scsi_ulto2b(entry->length, one->cdb_length);
one->cdb_usage[0] = opcode;
memcpy(&one->cdb_usage[1], entry->usage,
entry->length - 1);
} else
one->support = 1;
break;
}
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return(retval);
}
int
ctl_report_supported_tmf(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_report_supported_tmf *cdb;
struct scsi_report_supported_tmf_data *data;
int retval;
int alloc_len, total_len;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_report_supported_tmf\n"));
cdb = (struct scsi_report_supported_tmf *)ctsio->cdb;
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_report_supported_tmf_data);
alloc_len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(total_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (total_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - total_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = total_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = total_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
data = (struct scsi_report_supported_tmf_data *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
data->byte1 |= RST_ATS | RST_ATSS | RST_CTSS | RST_LURS | RST_QTS |
RST_TRS;
data->byte2 |= RST_QAES | RST_QTSS | RST_ITNRS;
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
int
ctl_report_timestamp(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_report_timestamp *cdb;
struct scsi_report_timestamp_data *data;
struct timeval tv;
int64_t timestamp;
int retval;
int alloc_len, total_len;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_report_timestamp\n"));
cdb = (struct scsi_report_timestamp *)ctsio->cdb;
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_report_timestamp_data);
alloc_len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(total_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (total_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - total_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = total_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = total_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
data = (struct scsi_report_timestamp_data *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
scsi_ulto2b(sizeof(*data) - 2, data->length);
data->origin = RTS_ORIG_OUTSIDE;
getmicrotime(&tv);
timestamp = (int64_t)tv.tv_sec * 1000 + tv.tv_usec / 1000;
scsi_ulto4b(timestamp >> 16, data->timestamp);
scsi_ulto2b(timestamp & 0xffff, &data->timestamp[4]);
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int
ctl_persistent_reserve_in(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_per_res_in *cdb;
int alloc_len, total_len = 0;
/* struct scsi_per_res_in_rsrv in_data; */
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
uint64_t key;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_persistent_reserve_in\n"));
cdb = (struct scsi_per_res_in *)ctsio->cdb;
alloc_len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retry:
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (cdb->action) {
case SPRI_RK: /* read keys */
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_keys) +
lun->pr_key_count *
sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_key);
break;
case SPRI_RR: /* read reservation */
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED)
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_rsrv);
else
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_header);
break;
case SPRI_RC: /* report capabilities */
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_cap);
break;
case SPRI_RS: /* read full status */
total_len = sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_header) +
(sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_full_desc) + 256) *
lun->pr_key_count;
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
default:
panic("Invalid PR type %x", cdb->action);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(total_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (total_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - total_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = total_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = total_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (cdb->action) {
case SPRI_RK: { // read keys
struct scsi_per_res_in_keys *res_keys;
int i, key_count;
res_keys = (struct scsi_per_res_in_keys*)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
/*
* We had to drop the lock to allocate our buffer, which
* leaves time for someone to come in with another
* persistent reservation. (That is unlikely, though,
* since this should be the only persistent reservation
* command active right now.)
*/
if (total_len != (sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_keys) +
(lun->pr_key_count *
sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_key)))){
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
printf("%s: reservation length changed, retrying\n",
__func__);
goto retry;
}
scsi_ulto4b(lun->PRGeneration, res_keys->header.generation);
scsi_ulto4b(sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_key) *
lun->pr_key_count, res_keys->header.length);
for (i = 0, key_count = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if ((key = ctl_get_prkey(lun, i)) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
/*
* We used lun->pr_key_count to calculate the
* size to allocate. If it turns out the number of
* initiators with the registered flag set is
* larger than that (i.e. they haven't been kept in
* sync), we've got a problem.
*/
if (key_count >= lun->pr_key_count) {
#ifdef NEEDTOPORT
csevent_log(CSC_CTL | CSC_SHELF_SW |
CTL_PR_ERROR,
csevent_LogType_Fault,
csevent_AlertLevel_Yellow,
csevent_FRU_ShelfController,
csevent_FRU_Firmware,
csevent_FRU_Unknown,
"registered keys %d >= key "
"count %d", key_count,
lun->pr_key_count);
#endif
key_count++;
continue;
}
scsi_u64to8b(key, res_keys->keys[key_count].key);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
key_count++;
}
break;
}
case SPRI_RR: { // read reservation
struct scsi_per_res_in_rsrv *res;
int tmp_len, header_only;
res = (struct scsi_per_res_in_rsrv *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
scsi_ulto4b(lun->PRGeneration, res->header.generation);
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED)
{
tmp_len = sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_rsrv);
scsi_ulto4b(sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_rsrv_data),
res->header.length);
header_only = 0;
} else {
tmp_len = sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_header);
scsi_ulto4b(0, res->header.length);
header_only = 1;
}
/*
* We had to drop the lock to allocate our buffer, which
* leaves time for someone to come in with another
* persistent reservation. (That is unlikely, though,
* since this should be the only persistent reservation
* command active right now.)
*/
if (tmp_len != total_len) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
printf("%s: reservation status changed, retrying\n",
__func__);
goto retry;
}
/*
* No reservation held, so we're done.
*/
if (header_only != 0)
break;
/*
* If the registration is an All Registrants type, the key
* is 0, since it doesn't really matter.
*/
if (lun->pr_res_idx != CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS) {
scsi_u64to8b(ctl_get_prkey(lun, lun->pr_res_idx),
res->data.reservation);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
res->data.scopetype = lun->res_type;
break;
}
case SPRI_RC: //report capabilities
{
struct scsi_per_res_cap *res_cap;
uint16_t type_mask;
res_cap = (struct scsi_per_res_cap *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
scsi_ulto2b(sizeof(*res_cap), res_cap->length);
res_cap->flags2 |= SPRI_TMV | SPRI_ALLOW_5;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
type_mask = SPRI_TM_WR_EX_AR |
SPRI_TM_EX_AC_RO |
SPRI_TM_WR_EX_RO |
SPRI_TM_EX_AC |
SPRI_TM_WR_EX |
SPRI_TM_EX_AC_AR;
scsi_ulto2b(type_mask, res_cap->type_mask);
break;
}
case SPRI_RS: { // read full status
struct scsi_per_res_in_full *res_status;
struct scsi_per_res_in_full_desc *res_desc;
struct ctl_port *port;
int i, len;
res_status = (struct scsi_per_res_in_full*)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
/*
* We had to drop the lock to allocate our buffer, which
* leaves time for someone to come in with another
* persistent reservation. (That is unlikely, though,
* since this should be the only persistent reservation
* command active right now.)
*/
if (total_len < (sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_header) +
(sizeof(struct scsi_per_res_in_full_desc) + 256) *
lun->pr_key_count)){
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
printf("%s: reservation length changed, retrying\n",
__func__);
goto retry;
}
scsi_ulto4b(lun->PRGeneration, res_status->header.generation);
res_desc = &res_status->desc[0];
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if ((key = ctl_get_prkey(lun, i)) == 0)
continue;
scsi_u64to8b(key, res_desc->res_key.key);
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED) &&
(lun->pr_res_idx == i ||
lun->pr_res_idx == CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS)) {
res_desc->flags = SPRI_FULL_R_HOLDER;
res_desc->scopetype = lun->res_type;
}
scsi_ulto2b(i / CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT,
res_desc->rel_trgt_port_id);
len = 0;
port = softc->ctl_ports[i / CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT];
if (port != NULL)
len = ctl_create_iid(port,
i % CTL_MAX_INIT_PER_PORT,
res_desc->transport_id);
scsi_ulto4b(len, res_desc->additional_length);
res_desc = (struct scsi_per_res_in_full_desc *)
&res_desc->transport_id[len];
}
scsi_ulto4b((uint8_t *)res_desc - (uint8_t *)&res_status->desc[0],
res_status->header.length);
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
default:
/*
* This is a bug, because we just checked for this above,
* and should have returned an error.
*/
panic("Invalid PR type %x", cdb->action);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* Returns 0 if ctl_persistent_reserve_out() should continue, non-zero if
* it should return.
*/
static int
ctl_pro_preempt(struct ctl_softc *softc, struct ctl_lun *lun, uint64_t res_key,
uint64_t sa_res_key, uint8_t type, uint32_t residx,
struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, struct scsi_per_res_out *cdb,
struct scsi_per_res_out_parms* param)
{
union ctl_ha_msg persis_io;
int i;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (sa_res_key == 0) {
if (lun->pr_res_idx == CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS) {
/* validate scope and type */
if ((cdb->scope_type & SPR_SCOPE_MASK) !=
SPR_LU_SCOPE) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 4);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (1);
}
if (type>8 || type==2 || type==4 || type==0) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (1);
}
/*
* Unregister everybody else and build UA for
* them
*/
for(i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if (i == residx || ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
lun->pr_key_count = 1;
lun->res_type = type;
if (lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_AR
&& lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_AR)
lun->pr_res_idx = residx;
lun->PRGeneration++;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* send msg to other side */
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_PREEMPT;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.residx = lun->pr_res_idx;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.res_type = type;
memcpy(persis_io.pr.pr_info.sa_res_key,
param->serv_act_res_key,
sizeof(param->serv_act_res_key));
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
/* not all registrants */
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ 8,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (1);
}
} else if (lun->pr_res_idx == CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS
|| !(lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED)) {
int found = 0;
if (res_key == sa_res_key) {
/* special case */
/*
* The spec implies this is not good but doesn't
* say what to do. There are two choices either
* generate a res conflict or check condition
* with illegal field in parameter data. Since
* that is what is done when the sa_res_key is
* zero I'll take that approach since this has
* to do with the sa_res_key.
*/
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ 8,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (1);
}
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) != sa_res_key)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
found = 1;
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count--;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if (!found) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
lun->PRGeneration++;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* send msg to other side */
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_PREEMPT;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.residx = lun->pr_res_idx;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.res_type = type;
memcpy(persis_io.pr.pr_info.sa_res_key,
param->serv_act_res_key,
sizeof(param->serv_act_res_key));
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
/* Reserved but not all registrants */
/* sa_res_key is res holder */
if (sa_res_key == ctl_get_prkey(lun, lun->pr_res_idx)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* validate scope and type */
if ((cdb->scope_type & SPR_SCOPE_MASK) !=
SPR_LU_SCOPE) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 4);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (1);
}
if (type>8 || type==2 || type==4 || type==0) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (1);
}
/*
* Do the following:
* if sa_res_key != res_key remove all
* registrants w/sa_res_key and generate UA
* for these registrants(Registrations
* Preempted) if it wasn't an exclusive
* reservation generate UA(Reservations
* Preempted) for all other registered nexuses
* if the type has changed. Establish the new
* reservation and holder. If res_key and
* sa_res_key are the same do the above
* except don't unregister the res holder.
*/
for(i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if (i == residx || ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
if (sa_res_key == ctl_get_prkey(lun, i)) {
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count--;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else if (type != lun->res_type
&& (lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_RO
|| lun->res_type ==SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_RO)){
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_RES_RELEASE);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
lun->res_type = type;
if (lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_AR
&& lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_AR)
lun->pr_res_idx = residx;
else
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS;
lun->PRGeneration++;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_PREEMPT;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.residx = lun->pr_res_idx;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.res_type = type;
memcpy(persis_io.pr.pr_info.sa_res_key,
param->serv_act_res_key,
sizeof(param->serv_act_res_key));
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
/*
* sa_res_key is not the res holder just
* remove registrants
*/
int found=0;
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if (sa_res_key != ctl_get_prkey(lun, i))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
found = 1;
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count--;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if (!found) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (1);
}
lun->PRGeneration++;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_PREEMPT;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.residx = lun->pr_res_idx;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.res_type = type;
memcpy(persis_io.pr.pr_info.sa_res_key,
param->serv_act_res_key,
sizeof(param->serv_act_res_key));
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
return (0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static void
ctl_pro_preempt_other(struct ctl_lun *lun, union ctl_ha_msg *msg)
{
uint64_t sa_res_key;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int i;
sa_res_key = scsi_8btou64(msg->pr.pr_info.sa_res_key);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (lun->pr_res_idx == CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS
|| lun->pr_res_idx == CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION
|| sa_res_key != ctl_get_prkey(lun, lun->pr_res_idx)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (sa_res_key == 0) {
/*
* Unregister everybody else and build UA for
* them
*/
for(i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if (i == msg->pr.pr_info.residx ||
ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
lun->pr_key_count = 1;
lun->res_type = msg->pr.pr_info.res_type;
if (lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_AR
&& lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_AR)
lun->pr_res_idx = msg->pr.pr_info.residx;
} else {
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if (sa_res_key == ctl_get_prkey(lun, i))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count--;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
} else {
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if (i == msg->pr.pr_info.residx ||
ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
if (sa_res_key == ctl_get_prkey(lun, i)) {
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count--;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else if (msg->pr.pr_info.res_type != lun->res_type
&& (lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_RO
|| lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_RO)) {
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_RES_RELEASE);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
lun->res_type = msg->pr.pr_info.res_type;
if (lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_AR
&& lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_AR)
lun->pr_res_idx = msg->pr.pr_info.residx;
else
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS;
}
lun->PRGeneration++;
}
int
ctl_persistent_reserve_out(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
int retval;
u_int32_t param_len;
struct scsi_per_res_out *cdb;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct scsi_per_res_out_parms* param;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
uint32_t residx;
uint64_t res_key, sa_res_key, key;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
uint8_t type;
union ctl_ha_msg persis_io;
int i;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_persistent_reserve_out\n"));
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
cdb = (struct scsi_per_res_out *)ctsio->cdb;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* We only support whole-LUN scope. The scope & type are ignored for
* register, register and ignore existing key and clear.
* We sometimes ignore scope and type on preempts too!!
* Verify reservation type here as well.
*/
type = cdb->scope_type & SPR_TYPE_MASK;
if ((cdb->action == SPRO_RESERVE)
|| (cdb->action == SPRO_RELEASE)) {
if ((cdb->scope_type & SPR_SCOPE_MASK) != SPR_LU_SCOPE) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 4);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
if (type>8 || type==2 || type==4 || type==0) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(/*ctsio*/ ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
}
param_len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
if ((ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0) {
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(param_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
ctsio->kern_data_len = param_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = param_len;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
param = (struct scsi_per_res_out_parms *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
residx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
res_key = scsi_8btou64(param->res_key.key);
sa_res_key = scsi_8btou64(param->serv_act_res_key);
/*
* Validate the reservation key here except for SPRO_REG_IGNO
* This must be done for all other service actions
*/
if ((cdb->action & SPRO_ACTION_MASK) != SPRO_REG_IGNO) {
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
if ((key = ctl_get_prkey(lun, residx)) != 0) {
if (res_key != key) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* The current key passed in doesn't match
* the one the initiator previously
* registered.
*/
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
} else if ((cdb->action & SPRO_ACTION_MASK) != SPRO_REGISTER) {
2013-04-02 12:22:44 +00:00
/*
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
* We are not registered
*/
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
} else if (res_key != 0) {
/*
* We are not registered and trying to register but
* the register key isn't zero.
*/
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
switch (cdb->action & SPRO_ACTION_MASK) {
case SPRO_REGISTER:
case SPRO_REG_IGNO: {
#if 0
printf("Registration received\n");
#endif
/*
* We don't support any of these options, as we report in
* the read capabilities request (see
* ctl_persistent_reserve_in(), above).
*/
if ((param->flags & SPR_SPEC_I_PT)
|| (param->flags & SPR_ALL_TG_PT)
|| (param->flags & SPR_APTPL)) {
int bit_ptr;
if (param->flags & SPR_APTPL)
bit_ptr = 0;
else if (param->flags & SPR_ALL_TG_PT)
bit_ptr = 2;
else /* SPR_SPEC_I_PT */
bit_ptr = 3;
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 0,
/*field*/ 20,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ bit_ptr);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* The initiator wants to clear the
* key/unregister.
*/
if (sa_res_key == 0) {
if ((res_key == 0
&& (cdb->action & SPRO_ACTION_MASK) == SPRO_REGISTER)
|| ((cdb->action & SPRO_ACTION_MASK) == SPRO_REG_IGNO
&& ctl_get_prkey(lun, residx) == 0)) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
goto done;
}
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, residx);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count--;
if (residx == lun->pr_res_idx) {
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION;
if ((lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_RO
|| lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_RO)
&& lun->pr_key_count) {
/*
* If the reservation is a registrants
* only type we need to generate a UA
* for other registered inits. The
* sense code should be RESERVATIONS
* RELEASED
*/
for (i = softc->init_min; i < softc->init_max; i++){
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i,
CTL_UA_RES_RELEASE);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
lun->res_type = 0;
} else if (lun->pr_res_idx == CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS) {
if (lun->pr_key_count==0) {
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->res_type = 0;
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION;
}
}
lun->PRGeneration++;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_UNREG_KEY;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.residx = residx;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else /* sa_res_key != 0 */ {
/*
* If we aren't registered currently then increment
* the key count and set the registered flag.
*/
ctl_alloc_prkey(lun, residx);
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, residx) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count++;
ctl_set_prkey(lun, residx, sa_res_key);
lun->PRGeneration++;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_REG_KEY;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.residx = residx;
memcpy(persis_io.pr.pr_info.sa_res_key,
param->serv_act_res_key,
sizeof(param->serv_act_res_key));
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
break;
}
case SPRO_RESERVE:
#if 0
printf("Reserve executed type %d\n", type);
#endif
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED) {
/*
* if this isn't the reservation holder and it's
* not a "all registrants" type or if the type is
* different then we have a conflict
*/
if ((lun->pr_res_idx != residx
&& lun->pr_res_idx != CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS)
|| lun->res_type != type) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else /* create a reservation */ {
/*
* If it's not an "all registrants" type record
* reservation holder
*/
if (type != SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_AR
&& type != SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_AR)
lun->pr_res_idx = residx; /* Res holder */
else
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS;
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->res_type = type;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* send msg to other side */
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_RESERVE;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.residx = lun->pr_res_idx;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.res_type = type;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
break;
case SPRO_RELEASE:
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED) == 0) {
/* No reservation exists return good status */
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
goto done;
}
/*
* Is this nexus a reservation holder?
*/
if (lun->pr_res_idx != residx
&& lun->pr_res_idx != CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS) {
/*
* not a res holder return good status but
* do nothing
*/
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
goto done;
}
if (lun->res_type != type) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_illegal_pr_release(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/* okay to release */
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION;
lun->res_type = 0;
/*
* if this isn't an exclusive access
* res generate UA for all other
* registrants.
*/
if (type != SPR_TYPE_EX_AC
&& type != SPR_TYPE_WR_EX) {
for (i = softc->init_min; i < softc->init_max; i++) {
if (i == residx || ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_RES_RELEASE);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* Send msg to other side */
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_RELEASE;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case SPRO_CLEAR:
/* send msg to other side */
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->res_type = 0;
lun->pr_key_count = 0;
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION;
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, residx);
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++)
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) != 0) {
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
lun->PRGeneration++;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
persis_io.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
persis_io.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION;
persis_io.pr.pr_info.action = CTL_PR_CLEAR;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &persis_io,
sizeof(persis_io.pr), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case SPRO_PREEMPT:
case SPRO_PRE_ABO: {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int nretval;
nretval = ctl_pro_preempt(softc, lun, res_key, sa_res_key, type,
residx, ctsio, cdb, param);
if (nretval != 0)
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
break;
}
default:
panic("Invalid PR type %x", cdb->action);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
done:
free(ctsio->kern_data_ptr, M_CTL);
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
/*
* This routine is for handling a message from the other SC pertaining to
* persistent reserve out. All the error checking will have been done
* so only perorming the action need be done here to keep the two
* in sync.
*/
static void
ctl_hndl_per_res_out_on_other_sc(union ctl_ha_msg *msg)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
int i;
uint32_t residx, targ_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
targ_lun = msg->hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) ||
((lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) == NULL)) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
return;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
2015-09-12 12:46:04 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
return;
}
residx = ctl_get_initindex(&msg->hdr.nexus);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch(msg->pr.pr_info.action) {
case CTL_PR_REG_KEY:
ctl_alloc_prkey(lun, msg->pr.pr_info.residx);
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, msg->pr.pr_info.residx) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count++;
ctl_set_prkey(lun, msg->pr.pr_info.residx,
scsi_8btou64(msg->pr.pr_info.sa_res_key));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->PRGeneration++;
break;
case CTL_PR_UNREG_KEY:
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, msg->pr.pr_info.residx);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->pr_key_count--;
/* XXX Need to see if the reservation has been released */
/* if so do we need to generate UA? */
if (msg->pr.pr_info.residx == lun->pr_res_idx) {
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION;
if ((lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_RO
|| lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_EX_AC_RO)
&& lun->pr_key_count) {
/*
* If the reservation is a registrants
* only type we need to generate a UA
* for other registered inits. The
* sense code should be RESERVATIONS
* RELEASED
*/
for (i = softc->init_min; i < softc->init_max; i++) {
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_RES_RELEASE);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
lun->res_type = 0;
} else if (lun->pr_res_idx == CTL_PR_ALL_REGISTRANTS) {
if (lun->pr_key_count==0) {
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->res_type = 0;
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION;
}
}
lun->PRGeneration++;
break;
case CTL_PR_RESERVE:
lun->flags |= CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->res_type = msg->pr.pr_info.res_type;
lun->pr_res_idx = msg->pr.pr_info.residx;
break;
case CTL_PR_RELEASE:
/*
* if this isn't an exclusive access res generate UA for all
* other registrants.
*/
if (lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_EX_AC
&& lun->res_type != SPR_TYPE_WR_EX) {
for (i = softc->init_min; i < softc->init_max; i++)
if (i == residx || ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
continue;
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_RES_RELEASE);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION;
lun->res_type = 0;
break;
case CTL_PR_PREEMPT:
ctl_pro_preempt_other(lun, msg);
break;
case CTL_PR_CLEAR:
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED;
lun->res_type = 0;
lun->pr_key_count = 0;
lun->pr_res_idx = CTL_PR_NO_RESERVATION;
for (i=0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++) {
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, i) == 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
ctl_clr_prkey(lun, i);
ctl_est_ua(lun, i, CTL_UA_REG_PREEMPT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
lun->PRGeneration++;
break;
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
int
ctl_read_write(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_lba_len_flags *lbalen;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
uint64_t lba;
uint32_t num_blocks;
int flags, retval;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int isread;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_read_write: command: %#x\n", ctsio->cdb[0]));
flags = 0;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
isread = ctsio->cdb[0] == READ_6 || ctsio->cdb[0] == READ_10
|| ctsio->cdb[0] == READ_12 || ctsio->cdb[0] == READ_16;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case READ_6:
case WRITE_6: {
struct scsi_rw_6 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_6 *)ctsio->cdb;
lba = scsi_3btoul(cdb->addr);
/* only 5 bits are valid in the most significant address byte */
lba &= 0x1fffff;
num_blocks = cdb->length;
/*
* This is correct according to SBC-2.
*/
if (num_blocks == 0)
num_blocks = 256;
break;
}
case READ_10:
case WRITE_10: {
struct scsi_rw_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_10 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW10_FUA)
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW10_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case WRITE_VERIFY_10: {
struct scsi_write_verify_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_verify_10 *)ctsio->cdb;
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (cdb->byte2 & SWV_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case READ_12:
case WRITE_12: {
struct scsi_rw_12 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_12 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW12_FUA)
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW12_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case WRITE_VERIFY_12: {
struct scsi_write_verify_12 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_verify_12 *)ctsio->cdb;
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (cdb->byte2 & SWV_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case READ_16:
case WRITE_16: {
struct scsi_rw_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_16 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW12_FUA)
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW12_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case WRITE_ATOMIC_16: {
struct scsi_write_atomic_16 *cdb;
if (lun->be_lun->atomicblock == 0) {
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
cdb = (struct scsi_write_atomic_16 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW12_FUA)
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW12_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
if (num_blocks > lun->be_lun->atomicblock) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio, /*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1, /*field*/ 12, /*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case WRITE_VERIFY_16: {
struct scsi_write_verify_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_verify_16 *)ctsio->cdb;
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (cdb->byte2 & SWV_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
default:
/*
* We got a command we don't support. This shouldn't
* happen, commands should be filtered out above us.
*/
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
/*
* The first check is to make sure we're in bounds, the second
* check is to catch wrap-around problems. If the lba + num blocks
* is less than the lba, then we've wrapped around and the block
* range is invalid anyway.
*/
if (((lba + num_blocks) > (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1))
|| ((lba + num_blocks) < lba)) {
ctl_set_lba_out_of_range(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* According to SBC-3, a transfer length of 0 is not an error.
* Note that this cannot happen with WRITE(6) or READ(6), since 0
* translates to 256 blocks for those commands.
*/
if (num_blocks == 0) {
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/* Set FUA and/or DPO if caches are disabled. */
if (isread) {
if ((lun->mode_pages.caching_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT].flags1 &
SCP_RCD) != 0)
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA | CTL_LLF_DPO;
} else {
if ((lun->mode_pages.caching_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT].flags1 &
SCP_WCE) == 0)
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
}
lbalen = (struct ctl_lba_len_flags *)
&ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
lbalen->lba = lba;
lbalen->len = num_blocks;
lbalen->flags = (isread ? CTL_LLF_READ : CTL_LLF_WRITE) | flags;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->kern_total_len = num_blocks * lun->be_lun->blocksize;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_read_write: calling data_submit()\n"));
retval = lun->backend->data_submit((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
static int
ctl_cnw_cont(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_lba_len_flags *lbalen;
int retval;
ctsio = &io->scsiio;
ctsio->io_hdr.status = CTL_STATUS_NONE;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_IO_CONT;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
lbalen = (struct ctl_lba_len_flags *)
&ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
lbalen->flags &= ~CTL_LLF_COMPARE;
lbalen->flags |= CTL_LLF_WRITE;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_cnw_cont: calling data_submit()\n"));
retval = lun->backend->data_submit((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
int
ctl_cnw(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_lba_len_flags *lbalen;
uint64_t lba;
uint32_t num_blocks;
int flags, retval;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_cnw: command: %#x\n", ctsio->cdb[0]));
flags = 0;
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case COMPARE_AND_WRITE: {
struct scsi_compare_and_write *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_compare_and_write *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW10_FUA)
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
if (cdb->byte2 & SRW10_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = cdb->length;
break;
}
default:
/*
* We got a command we don't support. This shouldn't
* happen, commands should be filtered out above us.
*/
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
/*
* The first check is to make sure we're in bounds, the second
* check is to catch wrap-around problems. If the lba + num blocks
* is less than the lba, then we've wrapped around and the block
* range is invalid anyway.
*/
if (((lba + num_blocks) > (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1))
|| ((lba + num_blocks) < lba)) {
ctl_set_lba_out_of_range(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* According to SBC-3, a transfer length of 0 is not an error.
*/
if (num_blocks == 0) {
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/* Set FUA if write cache is disabled. */
if ((lun->mode_pages.caching_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT].flags1 &
SCP_WCE) == 0)
flags |= CTL_LLF_FUA;
ctsio->kern_total_len = 2 * num_blocks * lun->be_lun->blocksize;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
/*
* Set the IO_CONT flag, so that if this I/O gets passed to
* ctl_data_submit_done(), it'll get passed back to
* ctl_ctl_cnw_cont() for further processing.
*/
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IO_CONT;
ctsio->io_cont = ctl_cnw_cont;
lbalen = (struct ctl_lba_len_flags *)
&ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
lbalen->lba = lba;
lbalen->len = num_blocks;
lbalen->flags = CTL_LLF_COMPARE | flags;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_cnw: calling data_submit()\n"));
retval = lun->backend->data_submit((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
int
ctl_verify(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_lba_len_flags *lbalen;
uint64_t lba;
uint32_t num_blocks;
int bytchk, flags;
int retval;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_verify: command: %#x\n", ctsio->cdb[0]));
bytchk = 0;
flags = CTL_LLF_FUA;
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
switch (ctsio->cdb[0]) {
case VERIFY_10: {
struct scsi_verify_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_verify_10 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SVFY_BYTCHK)
bytchk = 1;
if (cdb->byte2 & SVFY_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case VERIFY_12: {
struct scsi_verify_12 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_verify_12 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SVFY_BYTCHK)
bytchk = 1;
if (cdb->byte2 & SVFY_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case VERIFY_16: {
struct scsi_rw_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_16 *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SVFY_BYTCHK)
bytchk = 1;
if (cdb->byte2 & SVFY_DPO)
flags |= CTL_LLF_DPO;
lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
num_blocks = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
default:
/*
* We got a command we don't support. This shouldn't
* happen, commands should be filtered out above us.
*/
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* The first check is to make sure we're in bounds, the second
* check is to catch wrap-around problems. If the lba + num blocks
* is less than the lba, then we've wrapped around and the block
* range is invalid anyway.
*/
if (((lba + num_blocks) > (lun->be_lun->maxlba + 1))
|| ((lba + num_blocks) < lba)) {
ctl_set_lba_out_of_range(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* According to SBC-3, a transfer length of 0 is not an error.
*/
if (num_blocks == 0) {
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
lbalen = (struct ctl_lba_len_flags *)
&ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
lbalen->lba = lba;
lbalen->len = num_blocks;
if (bytchk) {
lbalen->flags = CTL_LLF_COMPARE | flags;
ctsio->kern_total_len = num_blocks * lun->be_lun->blocksize;
} else {
lbalen->flags = CTL_LLF_VERIFY | flags;
ctsio->kern_total_len = 0;
}
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_verify: calling data_submit()\n"));
retval = lun->backend->data_submit((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int
ctl_report_luns(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct scsi_report_luns *cdb;
struct scsi_report_luns_data *lun_data;
struct ctl_lun *lun, *request_lun;
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int num_luns, retval;
uint32_t alloc_len, lun_datalen;
int num_filled;
uint32_t initidx, targ_lun_id, lun_id;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
cdb = (struct scsi_report_luns *)ctsio->cdb;
port = ctl_io_port(&ctsio->io_hdr);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_report_luns\n"));
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
num_luns = 0;
for (targ_lun_id = 0; targ_lun_id < CTL_MAX_LUNS; targ_lun_id++) {
if (ctl_lun_map_from_port(port, targ_lun_id) < CTL_MAX_LUNS)
num_luns++;
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (cdb->select_report) {
case RPL_REPORT_DEFAULT:
case RPL_REPORT_ALL:
case RPL_REPORT_NONSUBSID:
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case RPL_REPORT_WELLKNOWN:
case RPL_REPORT_ADMIN:
case RPL_REPORT_CONGLOM:
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
num_luns = 0;
break;
default:
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
alloc_len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
/*
* The initiator has to allocate at least 16 bytes for this request,
* so he can at least get the header and the first LUN. Otherwise
* we reject the request (per SPC-3 rev 14, section 6.21).
*/
if (alloc_len < (sizeof(struct scsi_report_luns_data) +
sizeof(struct scsi_report_luns_lundata))) {
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 6,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
request_lun = (struct ctl_lun *)
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
lun_datalen = sizeof(*lun_data) +
(num_luns * sizeof(struct scsi_report_luns_lundata));
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(lun_datalen, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun_data = (struct scsi_report_luns_data *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
for (targ_lun_id = 0, num_filled = 0; targ_lun_id < CTL_MAX_LUNS && num_filled < num_luns; targ_lun_id++) {
lun_id = ctl_lun_map_from_port(port, targ_lun_id);
if (lun_id >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
lun = softc->ctl_luns[lun_id];
if (lun == NULL)
continue;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (targ_lun_id <= 0xff) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Peripheral addressing method, bus number 0.
*/
lun_data->luns[num_filled].lundata[0] =
RPL_LUNDATA_ATYP_PERIPH;
lun_data->luns[num_filled].lundata[1] = targ_lun_id;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
num_filled++;
} else if (targ_lun_id <= 0x3fff) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Flat addressing method.
*/
lun_data->luns[num_filled].lundata[0] =
RPL_LUNDATA_ATYP_FLAT | (targ_lun_id >> 8);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun_data->luns[num_filled].lundata[1] =
(targ_lun_id & 0xff);
num_filled++;
} else if (targ_lun_id <= 0xffffff) {
/*
* Extended flat addressing method.
*/
lun_data->luns[num_filled].lundata[0] =
RPL_LUNDATA_ATYP_EXTLUN | 0x12;
scsi_ulto3b(targ_lun_id,
&lun_data->luns[num_filled].lundata[1]);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
num_filled++;
} else {
printf("ctl_report_luns: bogus LUN number %jd, "
"skipping\n", (intmax_t)targ_lun_id);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* According to SPC-3, rev 14 section 6.21:
*
* "The execution of a REPORT LUNS command to any valid and
* installed logical unit shall clear the REPORTED LUNS DATA
* HAS CHANGED unit attention condition for all logical
* units of that target with respect to the requesting
* initiator. A valid and installed logical unit is one
* having a PERIPHERAL QUALIFIER of 000b in the standard
* INQUIRY data (see 6.4.2)."
*
* If request_lun is NULL, the LUN this report luns command
* was issued to is either disabled or doesn't exist. In that
* case, we shouldn't clear any pending lun change unit
* attention.
*/
if (request_lun != NULL) {
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_clr_ua(lun, initidx, CTL_UA_LUN_CHANGE);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* It's quite possible that we've returned fewer LUNs than we allocated
* space for. Trim it.
*/
lun_datalen = sizeof(*lun_data) +
(num_filled * sizeof(struct scsi_report_luns_lundata));
if (lun_datalen < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - lun_datalen;
ctsio->kern_data_len = lun_datalen;
ctsio->kern_total_len = lun_datalen;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* We set this to the actual data length, regardless of how much
* space we actually have to return results. If the user looks at
* this value, he'll know whether or not he allocated enough space
* and reissue the command if necessary. We don't support well
* known logical units, so if the user asks for that, return none.
*/
scsi_ulto4b(lun_datalen - 8, lun_data->length);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* We can only return SCSI_STATUS_CHECK_COND when we can't satisfy
* this request.
*/
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
int
ctl_request_sense(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_request_sense *cdb;
struct scsi_sense_data *sense_ptr;
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
struct ctl_softc *ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t initidx;
int have_error;
scsi_sense_data_type sense_format;
ctl_ua_type ua_type;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
cdb = (struct scsi_request_sense *)ctsio->cdb;
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
ctl_softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_request_sense\n"));
/*
* Determine which sense format the user wants.
*/
if (cdb->byte2 & SRS_DESC)
sense_format = SSD_TYPE_DESC;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
else
sense_format = SSD_TYPE_FIXED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(sizeof(*sense_ptr), M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
sense_ptr = (struct scsi_sense_data *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* struct scsi_sense_data, which is currently set to 256 bytes, is
* larger than the largest allowed value for the length field in the
* REQUEST SENSE CDB, which is 252 bytes as of SPC-4.
*/
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = cdb->length;
ctsio->kern_total_len = cdb->length;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* If we don't have a LUN, we don't have any pending sense.
*/
if (lun == NULL)
goto no_sense;
have_error = 0;
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
/*
* Check for pending sense, and then for pending unit attentions.
* Pending sense gets returned first, then pending unit attentions.
*/
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
#ifdef CTL_WITH_CA
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (ctl_is_set(lun->have_ca, initidx)) {
scsi_sense_data_type stored_format;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Check to see which sense format was used for the stored
* sense data.
*/
stored_format = scsi_sense_type(&lun->pending_sense[initidx]);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If the user requested a different sense format than the
* one we stored, then we need to convert it to the other
* format. If we're going from descriptor to fixed format
* sense data, we may lose things in translation, depending
* on what options were used.
*
* If the stored format is SSD_TYPE_NONE (i.e. invalid),
* for some reason we'll just copy it out as-is.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
if ((stored_format == SSD_TYPE_FIXED)
&& (sense_format == SSD_TYPE_DESC))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_sense_to_desc((struct scsi_sense_data_fixed *)
&lun->pending_sense[initidx],
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
(struct scsi_sense_data_desc *)sense_ptr);
else if ((stored_format == SSD_TYPE_DESC)
&& (sense_format == SSD_TYPE_FIXED))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_sense_to_fixed((struct scsi_sense_data_desc *)
&lun->pending_sense[initidx],
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
(struct scsi_sense_data_fixed *)sense_ptr);
else
memcpy(sense_ptr, &lun->pending_sense[initidx],
MIN(sizeof(*sense_ptr),
sizeof(lun->pending_sense[initidx])));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_clear_mask(lun->have_ca, initidx);
have_error = 1;
} else
#endif
{
ua_type = ctl_build_ua(lun, initidx, sense_ptr, sense_format);
if (ua_type != CTL_UA_NONE)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
have_error = 1;
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
if (ua_type == CTL_UA_LUN_CHANGE) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_lock(&ctl_softc->ctl_lock);
2015-09-03 12:56:57 +00:00
ctl_clr_ua_allluns(ctl_softc, initidx, ua_type);
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&ctl_softc->ctl_lock);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* We already have a pending error, return it.
*/
if (have_error != 0) {
/*
* We report the SCSI status as OK, since the status of the
* request sense command itself is OK.
* We report 0 for the sense length, because we aren't doing
* autosense in this case. We're reporting sense as
* parameter data.
*/
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
no_sense:
/*
* No sense information to report, so we report that everything is
* okay.
*/
ctl_set_sense_data(sense_ptr,
lun,
sense_format,
/*current_error*/ 1,
/*sense_key*/ SSD_KEY_NO_SENSE,
/*asc*/ 0x00,
/*ascq*/ 0x00,
SSD_ELEM_NONE);
/*
* We report 0 for the sense length, because we aren't doing
* autosense in this case. We're reporting sense as parameter data.
*/
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_tur(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_tur\n"));
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
/*
* SCSI VPD page 0x00, the Supported VPD Pages page.
*/
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_supported(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct scsi_vpd_supported_pages *pages;
int sup_page_size;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int p;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
sup_page_size = sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_supported_pages) *
SCSI_EVPD_NUM_SUPPORTED_PAGES;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(sup_page_size, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
pages = (struct scsi_vpd_supported_pages *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (sup_page_size < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - sup_page_size;
ctsio->kern_data_len = sup_page_size;
ctsio->kern_total_len = sup_page_size;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time. Need to change this
* to figure out whether the disk device is actually online or not.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
pages->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
pages->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
p = 0;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* Supported VPD pages */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_SUPPORTED_PAGES;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* Serial Number */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_UNIT_SERIAL_NUMBER;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* Device Identification */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_DEVICE_ID;
/* Extended INQUIRY Data */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_EXTENDED_INQUIRY_DATA;
/* Mode Page Policy */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_MODE_PAGE_POLICY;
/* SCSI Ports */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_SCSI_PORTS;
/* Third-party Copy */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_SCSI_TPC;
if (lun != NULL && lun->be_lun->lun_type == T_DIRECT) {
/* Block limits */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_BLOCK_LIMITS;
/* Block Device Characteristics */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_BDC;
/* Logical Block Provisioning */
pages->page_list[p++] = SVPD_LBP;
}
pages->length = p;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
/*
* SCSI VPD page 0x80, the Unit Serial Number page.
*/
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_serial(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct scsi_vpd_unit_serial_number *sn_ptr;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int data_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
data_len = 4 + CTL_SN_LEN;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(data_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
sn_ptr = (struct scsi_vpd_unit_serial_number *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
if (data_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - data_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = data_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = data_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time. Need to change this
* to figure out whether the disk device is actually online or not.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
sn_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
sn_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
sn_ptr->page_code = SVPD_UNIT_SERIAL_NUMBER;
sn_ptr->length = CTL_SN_LEN;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If we don't have a LUN, we just leave the serial number as
* all spaces.
*/
if (lun != NULL) {
strncpy((char *)sn_ptr->serial_num,
(char *)lun->be_lun->serial_num, CTL_SN_LEN);
} else
memset(sn_ptr->serial_num, 0x20, CTL_SN_LEN);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
/*
* SCSI VPD page 0x86, the Extended INQUIRY Data page.
*/
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_eid(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct scsi_vpd_extended_inquiry_data *eid_ptr;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int data_len;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
data_len = sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_extended_inquiry_data);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(data_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
eid_ptr = (struct scsi_vpd_extended_inquiry_data *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (data_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - data_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = data_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = data_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
eid_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
eid_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
eid_ptr->page_code = SVPD_EXTENDED_INQUIRY_DATA;
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
scsi_ulto2b(data_len - 4, eid_ptr->page_length);
/*
* We support head of queue, ordered and simple tags.
*/
eid_ptr->flags2 = SVPD_EID_HEADSUP | SVPD_EID_ORDSUP | SVPD_EID_SIMPSUP;
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
/*
* Volatile cache supported.
*/
eid_ptr->flags3 = SVPD_EID_V_SUP;
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
/*
* This means that we clear the REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED unit
* attention for a particular IT nexus on all LUNs once we report
* it to that nexus once. This bit is required as of SPC-4.
*/
eid_ptr->flags4 = SVPD_EID_LUICLT;
/*
* XXX KDM in order to correctly answer this, we would need
* information from the SIM to determine how much sense data it
* can send. So this would really be a path inquiry field, most
* likely. This can be set to a maximum of 252 according to SPC-4,
* but the hardware may or may not be able to support that much.
* 0 just means that the maximum sense data length is not reported.
*/
eid_ptr->max_sense_length = 0;
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_mpp(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct scsi_vpd_mode_page_policy *mpp_ptr;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int data_len;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
data_len = sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_mode_page_policy) +
sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_mode_page_policy_descr);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(data_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
mpp_ptr = (struct scsi_vpd_mode_page_policy *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (data_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - data_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = data_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = data_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
mpp_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
mpp_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
mpp_ptr->page_code = SVPD_MODE_PAGE_POLICY;
scsi_ulto2b(data_len - 4, mpp_ptr->page_length);
mpp_ptr->descr[0].page_code = 0x3f;
mpp_ptr->descr[0].subpage_code = 0xff;
mpp_ptr->descr[0].policy = SVPD_MPP_SHARED;
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
/*
* SCSI VPD page 0x83, the Device Identification page.
*/
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_devid(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct scsi_vpd_device_id *devid_ptr;
struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *desc;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_port *port;
int data_len;
uint8_t proto;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
port = ctl_io_port(&ctsio->io_hdr);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
data_len = sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_device_id) +
sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor) +
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_rel_trgt_port_id) +
sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor) +
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_trgt_port_grp_id);
if (lun && lun->lun_devid)
data_len += lun->lun_devid->len;
if (port && port->port_devid)
data_len += port->port_devid->len;
if (port && port->target_devid)
data_len += port->target_devid->len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(data_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
devid_ptr = (struct scsi_vpd_device_id *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (data_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - data_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = data_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = data_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
devid_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
devid_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
devid_ptr->page_code = SVPD_DEVICE_ID;
scsi_ulto2b(data_len - 4, devid_ptr->length);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (port && port->port_type == CTL_PORT_FC)
proto = SCSI_PROTO_FC << 4;
else if (port && port->port_type == CTL_PORT_ISCSI)
proto = SCSI_PROTO_ISCSI << 4;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
else
proto = SCSI_PROTO_SPI << 4;
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)devid_ptr->desc_list;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* We're using a LUN association here. i.e., this device ID is a
* per-LUN identifier.
*/
if (lun && lun->lun_devid) {
memcpy(desc, lun->lun_devid->data, lun->lun_devid->len);
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)((uint8_t *)desc +
lun->lun_devid->len);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* This is for the WWPN which is a port association.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
if (port && port->port_devid) {
memcpy(desc, port->port_devid->data, port->port_devid->len);
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)((uint8_t *)desc +
port->port_devid->len);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* This is for the Relative Target Port(type 4h) identifier
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
desc->proto_codeset = proto | SVPD_ID_CODESET_BINARY;
desc->id_type = SVPD_ID_PIV | SVPD_ID_ASSOC_PORT |
SVPD_ID_TYPE_RELTARG;
desc->length = 4;
scsi_ulto2b(ctsio->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port, &desc->identifier[2]);
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)(&desc->identifier[0] +
sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_rel_trgt_port_id));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* This is for the Target Port Group(type 5h) identifier
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
desc->proto_codeset = proto | SVPD_ID_CODESET_BINARY;
desc->id_type = SVPD_ID_PIV | SVPD_ID_ASSOC_PORT |
SVPD_ID_TYPE_TPORTGRP;
desc->length = 4;
scsi_ulto2b(ctsio->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port / softc->port_cnt + 1,
&desc->identifier[2]);
desc = (struct scsi_vpd_id_descriptor *)(&desc->identifier[0] +
sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_id_trgt_port_grp_id));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* This is for the Target identifier
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
if (port && port->target_devid) {
memcpy(desc, port->target_devid->data, port->target_devid->len);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_scsi_ports(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct scsi_vpd_scsi_ports *sp;
struct scsi_vpd_port_designation *pd;
struct scsi_vpd_port_designation_cont *pdc;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_port *port;
int data_len, num_target_ports, iid_len, id_len;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
num_target_ports = 0;
iid_len = 0;
id_len = 0;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
if ((port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) == 0)
continue;
if (lun != NULL &&
ctl_lun_map_to_port(port, lun->lun) >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
num_target_ports++;
if (port->init_devid)
iid_len += port->init_devid->len;
if (port->port_devid)
id_len += port->port_devid->len;
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
data_len = sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_scsi_ports) +
num_target_ports * (sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_port_designation) +
sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_port_designation_cont)) + iid_len + id_len;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(data_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
sp = (struct scsi_vpd_scsi_ports *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (data_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - data_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = data_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = data_len;
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time. Need to change this
* to figure out whether the disk device is actually online or not.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
sp->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
sp->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
sp->page_code = SVPD_SCSI_PORTS;
scsi_ulto2b(data_len - sizeof(struct scsi_vpd_scsi_ports),
sp->page_length);
pd = &sp->design[0];
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(port, &softc->port_list, links) {
if ((port->status & CTL_PORT_STATUS_ONLINE) == 0)
continue;
if (lun != NULL &&
ctl_lun_map_to_port(port, lun->lun) >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
scsi_ulto2b(port->targ_port, pd->relative_port_id);
if (port->init_devid) {
iid_len = port->init_devid->len;
memcpy(pd->initiator_transportid,
port->init_devid->data, port->init_devid->len);
} else
iid_len = 0;
scsi_ulto2b(iid_len, pd->initiator_transportid_length);
pdc = (struct scsi_vpd_port_designation_cont *)
(&pd->initiator_transportid[iid_len]);
if (port->port_devid) {
id_len = port->port_devid->len;
memcpy(pdc->target_port_descriptors,
port->port_devid->data, port->port_devid->len);
} else
id_len = 0;
scsi_ulto2b(id_len, pdc->target_port_descriptors_length);
pd = (struct scsi_vpd_port_designation *)
((uint8_t *)pdc->target_port_descriptors + id_len);
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_block_limits(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct scsi_vpd_block_limits *bl_ptr;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int bs;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(sizeof(*bl_ptr), M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
bl_ptr = (struct scsi_vpd_block_limits *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (sizeof(*bl_ptr) < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - sizeof(*bl_ptr);
ctsio->kern_data_len = sizeof(*bl_ptr);
ctsio->kern_total_len = sizeof(*bl_ptr);
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time. Need to change this
* to figure out whether the disk device is actually online or not.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
bl_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
bl_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
bl_ptr->page_code = SVPD_BLOCK_LIMITS;
scsi_ulto2b(sizeof(*bl_ptr) - 4, bl_ptr->page_length);
bl_ptr->max_cmp_write_len = 0xff;
scsi_ulto4b(0xffffffff, bl_ptr->max_txfer_len);
if (lun != NULL) {
bs = lun->be_lun->blocksize;
scsi_ulto4b(lun->be_lun->opttxferlen, bl_ptr->opt_txfer_len);
if (lun->be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_UNMAP) {
scsi_ulto4b(0xffffffff, bl_ptr->max_unmap_lba_cnt);
scsi_ulto4b(0xffffffff, bl_ptr->max_unmap_blk_cnt);
if (lun->be_lun->ublockexp != 0) {
scsi_ulto4b((1 << lun->be_lun->ublockexp),
bl_ptr->opt_unmap_grain);
scsi_ulto4b(0x80000000 | lun->be_lun->ublockoff,
bl_ptr->unmap_grain_align);
}
}
scsi_ulto4b(lun->be_lun->atomicblock,
bl_ptr->max_atomic_transfer_length);
scsi_ulto4b(0, bl_ptr->atomic_alignment);
scsi_ulto4b(0, bl_ptr->atomic_transfer_length_granularity);
scsi_ulto4b(0, bl_ptr->max_atomic_transfer_length_with_atomic_boundary);
scsi_ulto4b(0, bl_ptr->max_atomic_boundary_size);
}
scsi_u64to8b(UINT64_MAX, bl_ptr->max_write_same_length);
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_bdc(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct scsi_vpd_block_device_characteristics *bdc_ptr;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
const char *value;
u_int i;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(sizeof(*bdc_ptr), M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
bdc_ptr = (struct scsi_vpd_block_device_characteristics *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (sizeof(*bdc_ptr) < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - sizeof(*bdc_ptr);
ctsio->kern_data_len = sizeof(*bdc_ptr);
ctsio->kern_total_len = sizeof(*bdc_ptr);
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time. Need to change this
* to figure out whether the disk device is actually online or not.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
bdc_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
bdc_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
bdc_ptr->page_code = SVPD_BDC;
scsi_ulto2b(sizeof(*bdc_ptr) - 4, bdc_ptr->page_length);
if (lun != NULL &&
(value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options, "rpm")) != NULL)
i = strtol(value, NULL, 0);
else
i = CTL_DEFAULT_ROTATION_RATE;
scsi_ulto2b(i, bdc_ptr->medium_rotation_rate);
if (lun != NULL &&
(value = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options, "formfactor")) != NULL)
i = strtol(value, NULL, 0);
else
i = 0;
bdc_ptr->wab_wac_ff = (i & 0x0f);
bdc_ptr->flags = SVPD_FUAB | SVPD_VBULS;
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd_lbp(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int alloc_len)
{
struct scsi_vpd_logical_block_prov *lbp_ptr;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(sizeof(*lbp_ptr), M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
lbp_ptr = (struct scsi_vpd_logical_block_prov *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
if (sizeof(*lbp_ptr) < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - sizeof(*lbp_ptr);
ctsio->kern_data_len = sizeof(*lbp_ptr);
ctsio->kern_total_len = sizeof(*lbp_ptr);
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
/*
* The control device is always connected. The disk device, on the
* other hand, may not be online all the time. Need to change this
* to figure out whether the disk device is actually online or not.
*/
if (lun != NULL)
lbp_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
else
lbp_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) | T_DIRECT;
lbp_ptr->page_code = SVPD_LBP;
scsi_ulto2b(sizeof(*lbp_ptr) - 4, lbp_ptr->page_length);
lbp_ptr->threshold_exponent = CTL_LBP_EXPONENT;
if (lun != NULL && lun->be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_UNMAP) {
lbp_ptr->flags = SVPD_LBP_UNMAP | SVPD_LBP_WS16 |
SVPD_LBP_WS10 | SVPD_LBP_RZ | SVPD_LBP_ANC_SUP;
lbp_ptr->prov_type = SVPD_LBP_THIN;
}
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
/*
* INQUIRY with the EVPD bit set.
*/
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int
ctl_inquiry_evpd(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct scsi_inquiry *cdb;
int alloc_len, retval;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
cdb = (struct scsi_inquiry *)ctsio->cdb;
alloc_len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
switch (cdb->page_code) {
case SVPD_SUPPORTED_PAGES:
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_supported(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_UNIT_SERIAL_NUMBER:
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_serial(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_DEVICE_ID:
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_devid(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_EXTENDED_INQUIRY_DATA:
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_eid(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_MODE_PAGE_POLICY:
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_mpp(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_SCSI_PORTS:
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_scsi_ports(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_SCSI_TPC:
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_tpc(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_BLOCK_LIMITS:
if (lun == NULL || lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_DIRECT)
goto err;
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_block_limits(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_BDC:
if (lun == NULL || lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_DIRECT)
goto err;
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_bdc(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
case SVPD_LBP:
if (lun == NULL || lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_DIRECT)
goto err;
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd_lbp(ctsio, alloc_len);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
default:
err:
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
break;
}
return (retval);
}
Improve SCSI Extended Inquiry VPD page (0x86) support. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: In struct scsi_extended_inquiry_data: - Increase the length field to 2 bytes, as it is 2 bytes in SPC-4. - Add bit definitions for the various Activiate Microcode actions. - Add the Sequential Access Logical Block Protection support bit, since we need that in the sa(4) driver. (For modifications that will come later.) - Add definitions for the various Multi I_T Nexus Microcode Download modes. sys/cam/ctl/ctl.c: As of SPC-4, a single report of "REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED" is to be given per I_T nexus. Once it is reported, the unit attention condition should be cleared for all LUNS attached to an I_T nexus. Previously that only happened when a REPORT LUNS command was processed. This behavior may be different (according to SAM-5) when the UA_INTLCK_CTRL bits are non-zero in the control mode page but CTL does not currently support that. So, in view of the spec, whenever we report a LUN inventory change unit attention, clear it on all LUNs for that particular I_T nexus. Add a new function, ctl_clear_ua() that will clear a unit attention on all LUNs for the given I_T nexus. One field in the extended inquiry data that we could potentially report at some point is the maximum supported sense data length. To do that, we would the SIM to report (via path inquiry perhaps) how much sense data it is able to send. Add comments to explain some of the bits that are set in the Extended Inquiry VPD page. Add a few comments to make it more clear which functions handle various VPD pages. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 week
2015-01-30 05:23:39 +00:00
/*
* Standard INQUIRY data.
*/
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int
ctl_inquiry_std(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_inquiry_data *inq_ptr;
struct scsi_inquiry *cdb;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_lun *lun;
char *val;
uint32_t alloc_len, data_len;
ctl_port_type port_type;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Figure out whether we're talking to a Fibre Channel port or not.
* We treat the ioctl front end, and any SCSI adapters, as packetized
* SCSI front ends.
*/
port = ctl_io_port(&ctsio->io_hdr);
if (port != NULL)
port_type = port->port_type;
else
port_type = CTL_PORT_SCSI;
if (port_type == CTL_PORT_IOCTL || port_type == CTL_PORT_INTERNAL)
port_type = CTL_PORT_SCSI;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
cdb = (struct scsi_inquiry *)ctsio->cdb;
alloc_len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
/*
* We malloc the full inquiry data size here and fill it
* in. If the user only asks for less, we'll give him
* that much.
*/
data_len = offsetof(struct scsi_inquiry_data, vendor_specific1);
ctsio->kern_data_ptr = malloc(data_len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
inq_ptr = (struct scsi_inquiry_data *)ctsio->kern_data_ptr;
ctsio->kern_sg_entries = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_resid = 0;
ctsio->kern_rel_offset = 0;
if (data_len < alloc_len) {
ctsio->residual = alloc_len - data_len;
ctsio->kern_data_len = data_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = data_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
ctsio->residual = 0;
ctsio->kern_data_len = alloc_len;
ctsio->kern_total_len = alloc_len;
}
if (lun != NULL) {
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) ||
softc->ha_link >= CTL_HA_LINK_UNKNOWN) {
inq_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_CONNECTED << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
} else {
inq_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_LU_OFFLINE << 5) |
lun->be_lun->lun_type;
}
} else
inq_ptr->device = (SID_QUAL_BAD_LU << 5) | T_NODEVICE;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* RMB in byte 2 is 0 */
inq_ptr->version = SCSI_REV_SPC4;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* According to SAM-3, even if a device only supports a single
* level of LUN addressing, it should still set the HISUP bit:
*
* 4.9.1 Logical unit numbers overview
*
* All logical unit number formats described in this standard are
* hierarchical in structure even when only a single level in that
* hierarchy is used. The HISUP bit shall be set to one in the
* standard INQUIRY data (see SPC-2) when any logical unit number
* format described in this standard is used. Non-hierarchical
* formats are outside the scope of this standard.
*
* Therefore we set the HiSup bit here.
*
* The reponse format is 2, per SPC-3.
*/
inq_ptr->response_format = SID_HiSup | 2;
inq_ptr->additional_length = data_len -
(offsetof(struct scsi_inquiry_data, additional_length) + 1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("additional_length = %d\n",
inq_ptr->additional_length));
inq_ptr->spc3_flags = SPC3_SID_3PC | SPC3_SID_TPGS_IMPLICIT;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* 16 bit addressing */
if (port_type == CTL_PORT_SCSI)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
inq_ptr->spc2_flags = SPC2_SID_ADDR16;
/* XXX set the SID_MultiP bit here if we're actually going to
respond on multiple ports */
inq_ptr->spc2_flags |= SPC2_SID_MultiP;
/* 16 bit data bus, synchronous transfers */
if (port_type == CTL_PORT_SCSI)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
inq_ptr->flags = SID_WBus16 | SID_Sync;
/*
* XXX KDM do we want to support tagged queueing on the control
* device at all?
*/
if ((lun == NULL)
|| (lun->be_lun->lun_type != T_PROCESSOR))
inq_ptr->flags |= SID_CmdQue;
/*
* Per SPC-3, unused bytes in ASCII strings are filled with spaces.
* We have 8 bytes for the vendor name, and 16 bytes for the device
* name and 4 bytes for the revision.
*/
if (lun == NULL || (val = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options,
"vendor")) == NULL) {
strncpy(inq_ptr->vendor, CTL_VENDOR, sizeof(inq_ptr->vendor));
} else {
memset(inq_ptr->vendor, ' ', sizeof(inq_ptr->vendor));
strncpy(inq_ptr->vendor, val,
min(sizeof(inq_ptr->vendor), strlen(val)));
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (lun == NULL) {
strncpy(inq_ptr->product, CTL_DIRECT_PRODUCT,
sizeof(inq_ptr->product));
} else if ((val = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options, "product")) == NULL) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (lun->be_lun->lun_type) {
case T_DIRECT:
strncpy(inq_ptr->product, CTL_DIRECT_PRODUCT,
sizeof(inq_ptr->product));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case T_PROCESSOR:
strncpy(inq_ptr->product, CTL_PROCESSOR_PRODUCT,
sizeof(inq_ptr->product));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
default:
strncpy(inq_ptr->product, CTL_UNKNOWN_PRODUCT,
sizeof(inq_ptr->product));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
} else {
memset(inq_ptr->product, ' ', sizeof(inq_ptr->product));
strncpy(inq_ptr->product, val,
min(sizeof(inq_ptr->product), strlen(val)));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* XXX make this a macro somewhere so it automatically gets
* incremented when we make changes.
*/
if (lun == NULL || (val = ctl_get_opt(&lun->be_lun->options,
"revision")) == NULL) {
strncpy(inq_ptr->revision, "0001", sizeof(inq_ptr->revision));
} else {
memset(inq_ptr->revision, ' ', sizeof(inq_ptr->revision));
strncpy(inq_ptr->revision, val,
min(sizeof(inq_ptr->revision), strlen(val)));
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* For parallel SCSI, we support double transition and single
* transition clocking. We also support QAS (Quick Arbitration
* and Selection) and Information Unit transfers on both the
* control and array devices.
*/
if (port_type == CTL_PORT_SCSI)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
inq_ptr->spi3data = SID_SPI_CLOCK_DT_ST | SID_SPI_QAS |
SID_SPI_IUS;
/* SAM-5 (no version claimed) */
scsi_ulto2b(0x00A0, inq_ptr->version1);
/* SPC-4 (no version claimed) */
scsi_ulto2b(0x0460, inq_ptr->version2);
if (port_type == CTL_PORT_FC) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* FCP-2 ANSI INCITS.350:2003 */
scsi_ulto2b(0x0917, inq_ptr->version3);
} else if (port_type == CTL_PORT_SCSI) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* SPI-4 ANSI INCITS.362:200x */
scsi_ulto2b(0x0B56, inq_ptr->version3);
} else if (port_type == CTL_PORT_ISCSI) {
/* iSCSI (no version claimed) */
scsi_ulto2b(0x0960, inq_ptr->version3);
} else if (port_type == CTL_PORT_SAS) {
/* SAS (no version claimed) */
scsi_ulto2b(0x0BE0, inq_ptr->version3);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if (lun == NULL) {
/* SBC-4 (no version claimed) */
scsi_ulto2b(0x0600, inq_ptr->version4);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
switch (lun->be_lun->lun_type) {
case T_DIRECT:
/* SBC-4 (no version claimed) */
scsi_ulto2b(0x0600, inq_ptr->version4);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case T_PROCESSOR:
default:
break;
}
}
ctl_set_success(ctsio);
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED;
ctsio->be_move_done = ctl_config_move_done;
ctl_datamove((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
int
ctl_inquiry(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
struct scsi_inquiry *cdb;
int retval;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_inquiry\n"));
cdb = (struct scsi_inquiry *)ctsio->cdb;
if (cdb->byte2 & SI_EVPD)
retval = ctl_inquiry_evpd(ctsio);
else if (cdb->page_code == 0)
retval = ctl_inquiry_std(ctsio);
else {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 2,
/*bit_valid*/ 0,
/*bit*/ 0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
return (retval);
}
/*
* For known CDB types, parse the LBA and length.
*/
static int
ctl_get_lba_len(union ctl_io *io, uint64_t *lba, uint64_t *len)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
if (io->io_hdr.io_type != CTL_IO_SCSI)
return (1);
switch (io->scsiio.cdb[0]) {
case COMPARE_AND_WRITE: {
struct scsi_compare_and_write *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_compare_and_write *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
*len = cdb->length;
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case READ_6:
case WRITE_6: {
struct scsi_rw_6 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_6 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_3btoul(cdb->addr);
/* only 5 bits are valid in the most significant address byte */
*lba &= 0x1fffff;
*len = cdb->length;
break;
}
case READ_10:
case WRITE_10: {
struct scsi_rw_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_10 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case WRITE_VERIFY_10: {
struct scsi_write_verify_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_verify_10 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case READ_12:
case WRITE_12: {
struct scsi_rw_12 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_12 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case WRITE_VERIFY_12: {
struct scsi_write_verify_12 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_verify_12 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case READ_16:
case WRITE_16: {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct scsi_rw_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_rw_16 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case WRITE_ATOMIC_16: {
struct scsi_write_atomic_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_atomic_16 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case WRITE_VERIFY_16: {
struct scsi_write_verify_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_verify_16 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case WRITE_SAME_10: {
struct scsi_write_same_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_same_10 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case WRITE_SAME_16: {
struct scsi_write_same_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_write_same_16 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case VERIFY_10: {
struct scsi_verify_10 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_verify_10 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_2btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case VERIFY_12: {
struct scsi_verify_12 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_verify_12 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_4btoul(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case VERIFY_16: {
struct scsi_verify_16 *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_verify_16 *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
*len = scsi_4btoul(cdb->length);
break;
}
case UNMAP: {
*lba = 0;
*len = UINT64_MAX;
break;
}
case SERVICE_ACTION_IN: { /* GET LBA STATUS */
struct scsi_get_lba_status *cdb;
cdb = (struct scsi_get_lba_status *)io->scsiio.cdb;
*lba = scsi_8btou64(cdb->addr);
*len = UINT32_MAX;
break;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
default:
return (1);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
return (0);
}
static ctl_action
ctl_extent_check_lba(uint64_t lba1, uint64_t len1, uint64_t lba2, uint64_t len2,
bool seq)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
uint64_t endlba1, endlba2;
endlba1 = lba1 + len1 - (seq ? 0 : 1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
endlba2 = lba2 + len2 - 1;
if ((endlba1 < lba2) || (endlba2 < lba1))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
else
return (CTL_ACTION_BLOCK);
}
static int
ctl_extent_check_unmap(union ctl_io *io, uint64_t lba2, uint64_t len2)
{
struct ctl_ptr_len_flags *ptrlen;
struct scsi_unmap_desc *buf, *end, *range;
uint64_t lba;
uint32_t len;
/* If not UNMAP -- go other way. */
if (io->io_hdr.io_type != CTL_IO_SCSI ||
io->scsiio.cdb[0] != UNMAP)
return (CTL_ACTION_ERROR);
/* If UNMAP without data -- block and wait for data. */
ptrlen = (struct ctl_ptr_len_flags *)
&io->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LBA_LEN];
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALLOCATED) == 0 ||
ptrlen->ptr == NULL)
return (CTL_ACTION_BLOCK);
/* UNMAP with data -- check for collision. */
buf = (struct scsi_unmap_desc *)ptrlen->ptr;
end = buf + ptrlen->len / sizeof(*buf);
for (range = buf; range < end; range++) {
lba = scsi_8btou64(range->lba);
len = scsi_4btoul(range->length);
if ((lba < lba2 + len2) && (lba + len > lba2))
return (CTL_ACTION_BLOCK);
}
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static ctl_action
ctl_extent_check(union ctl_io *io1, union ctl_io *io2, bool seq)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
uint64_t lba1, lba2;
uint64_t len1, len2;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int retval;
if (ctl_get_lba_len(io2, &lba2, &len2) != 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (CTL_ACTION_ERROR);
retval = ctl_extent_check_unmap(io1, lba2, len2);
if (retval != CTL_ACTION_ERROR)
return (retval);
if (ctl_get_lba_len(io1, &lba1, &len1) != 0)
return (CTL_ACTION_ERROR);
if (io1->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_SERSEQ_DONE)
seq = FALSE;
return (ctl_extent_check_lba(lba1, len1, lba2, len2, seq));
}
static ctl_action
ctl_extent_check_seq(union ctl_io *io1, union ctl_io *io2)
{
uint64_t lba1, lba2;
uint64_t len1, len2;
if (io1->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_SERSEQ_DONE)
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
if (ctl_get_lba_len(io1, &lba1, &len1) != 0)
return (CTL_ACTION_ERROR);
if (ctl_get_lba_len(io2, &lba2, &len2) != 0)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (CTL_ACTION_ERROR);
if (lba1 + len1 == lba2)
return (CTL_ACTION_BLOCK);
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static ctl_action
ctl_check_for_blockage(struct ctl_lun *lun, union ctl_io *pending_io,
union ctl_io *ooa_io)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *pending_entry, *ooa_entry;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_serialize_action *serialize_row;
/*
* The initiator attempted multiple untagged commands at the same
* time. Can't do that.
*/
if ((pending_io->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_UNTAGGED)
&& (ooa_io->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_UNTAGGED)
&& ((pending_io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port ==
ooa_io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port)
&& (pending_io->io_hdr.nexus.initid ==
ooa_io->io_hdr.nexus.initid))
&& ((ooa_io->io_hdr.flags & (CTL_FLAG_ABORT |
CTL_FLAG_STATUS_SENT)) == 0))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP);
/*
* The initiator attempted to send multiple tagged commands with
* the same ID. (It's fine if different initiators have the same
* tag ID.)
*
* Even if all of those conditions are true, we don't kill the I/O
* if the command ahead of us has been aborted. We won't end up
* sending it to the FETD, and it's perfectly legal to resend a
* command with the same tag number as long as the previous
* instance of this tag number has been aborted somehow.
*/
if ((pending_io->scsiio.tag_type != CTL_TAG_UNTAGGED)
&& (ooa_io->scsiio.tag_type != CTL_TAG_UNTAGGED)
&& (pending_io->scsiio.tag_num == ooa_io->scsiio.tag_num)
&& ((pending_io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port ==
ooa_io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port)
&& (pending_io->io_hdr.nexus.initid ==
ooa_io->io_hdr.nexus.initid))
&& ((ooa_io->io_hdr.flags & (CTL_FLAG_ABORT |
CTL_FLAG_STATUS_SENT)) == 0))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP_TAG);
/*
* If we get a head of queue tag, SAM-3 says that we should
* immediately execute it.
*
* What happens if this command would normally block for some other
* reason? e.g. a request sense with a head of queue tag
* immediately after a write. Normally that would block, but this
* will result in its getting executed immediately...
*
* We currently return "pass" instead of "skip", so we'll end up
* going through the rest of the queue to check for overlapped tags.
*
* XXX KDM check for other types of blockage first??
*/
if (pending_io->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_HEAD_OF_QUEUE)
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
/*
* Ordered tags have to block until all items ahead of them
* have completed. If we get called with an ordered tag, we always
* block, if something else is ahead of us in the queue.
*/
if (pending_io->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_ORDERED)
return (CTL_ACTION_BLOCK);
/*
* Simple tags get blocked until all head of queue and ordered tags
* ahead of them have completed. I'm lumping untagged commands in
* with simple tags here. XXX KDM is that the right thing to do?
*/
if (((pending_io->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_UNTAGGED)
|| (pending_io->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_SIMPLE))
&& ((ooa_io->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_HEAD_OF_QUEUE)
|| (ooa_io->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_ORDERED)))
return (CTL_ACTION_BLOCK);
pending_entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(&pending_io->scsiio, NULL);
ooa_entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(&ooa_io->scsiio, NULL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
serialize_row = ctl_serialize_table[ooa_entry->seridx];
switch (serialize_row[pending_entry->seridx]) {
case CTL_SER_BLOCK:
return (CTL_ACTION_BLOCK);
case CTL_SER_EXTENT:
return (ctl_extent_check(ooa_io, pending_io,
(lun->be_lun && lun->be_lun->serseq == CTL_LUN_SERSEQ_ON)));
case CTL_SER_EXTENTOPT:
if ((lun->mode_pages.control_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT].queue_flags
& SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK) != SCP_QUEUE_ALG_UNRESTRICTED)
return (ctl_extent_check(ooa_io, pending_io,
(lun->be_lun &&
lun->be_lun->serseq == CTL_LUN_SERSEQ_ON)));
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
case CTL_SER_EXTENTSEQ:
if (lun->be_lun && lun->be_lun->serseq != CTL_LUN_SERSEQ_OFF)
return (ctl_extent_check_seq(ooa_io, pending_io));
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case CTL_SER_PASS:
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
case CTL_SER_BLOCKOPT:
if ((lun->mode_pages.control_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT].queue_flags
& SCP_QUEUE_ALG_MASK) != SCP_QUEUE_ALG_UNRESTRICTED)
return (CTL_ACTION_BLOCK);
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case CTL_SER_SKIP:
return (CTL_ACTION_SKIP);
default:
panic("invalid serialization value %d",
serialize_row[pending_entry->seridx]);
}
return (CTL_ACTION_ERROR);
}
/*
* Check for blockage or overlaps against the OOA (Order Of Arrival) queue.
* Assumptions:
* - pending_io is generally either incoming, or on the blocked queue
* - starting I/O is the I/O we want to start the check with.
*/
static ctl_action
ctl_check_ooa(struct ctl_lun *lun, union ctl_io *pending_io,
union ctl_io *starting_io)
{
union ctl_io *ooa_io;
ctl_action action;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Run back along the OOA queue, starting with the current
* blocked I/O and going through every I/O before it on the
* queue. If starting_io is NULL, we'll just end up returning
* CTL_ACTION_PASS.
*/
for (ooa_io = starting_io; ooa_io != NULL;
ooa_io = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_PREV(&ooa_io->io_hdr, ctl_ooaq,
ooa_links)){
/*
* This routine just checks to see whether
* cur_blocked is blocked by ooa_io, which is ahead
* of it in the queue. It doesn't queue/dequeue
* cur_blocked.
*/
action = ctl_check_for_blockage(lun, pending_io, ooa_io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (action) {
case CTL_ACTION_BLOCK:
case CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP:
case CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP_TAG:
case CTL_ACTION_SKIP:
case CTL_ACTION_ERROR:
return (action);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
case CTL_ACTION_PASS:
break;
default:
panic("invalid action %d", action);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
}
return (CTL_ACTION_PASS);
}
/*
* Assumptions:
* - An I/O has just completed, and has been removed from the per-LUN OOA
* queue, so some items on the blocked queue may now be unblocked.
*/
static int
ctl_check_blocked(struct ctl_lun *lun)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
union ctl_io *cur_blocked, *next_blocked;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Run forward from the head of the blocked queue, checking each
* entry against the I/Os prior to it on the OOA queue to see if
* there is still any blockage.
*
* We cannot use the TAILQ_FOREACH() macro, because it can't deal
* with our removing a variable on it while it is traversing the
* list.
*/
for (cur_blocked = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_FIRST(&lun->blocked_queue);
cur_blocked != NULL; cur_blocked = next_blocked) {
union ctl_io *prev_ooa;
ctl_action action;
next_blocked = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_NEXT(&cur_blocked->io_hdr,
blocked_links);
prev_ooa = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_PREV(&cur_blocked->io_hdr,
ctl_ooaq, ooa_links);
/*
* If cur_blocked happens to be the first item in the OOA
* queue now, prev_ooa will be NULL, and the action
* returned will just be CTL_ACTION_PASS.
*/
action = ctl_check_ooa(lun, cur_blocked, prev_ooa);
switch (action) {
case CTL_ACTION_BLOCK:
/* Nothing to do here, still blocked */
break;
case CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP:
case CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP_TAG:
/*
* This shouldn't happen! In theory we've already
* checked this command for overlap...
*/
break;
case CTL_ACTION_PASS:
case CTL_ACTION_SKIP: {
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* The skip case shouldn't happen, this transaction
* should have never made it onto the blocked queue.
*/
/*
* This I/O is no longer blocked, we can remove it
* from the blocked queue. Since this is a TAILQ
* (doubly linked list), we can do O(1) removals
* from any place on the list.
*/
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->blocked_queue, &cur_blocked->io_hdr,
blocked_links);
cur_blocked->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_BLOCKED;
if ((softc->ha_mode != CTL_HA_MODE_XFER) &&
(cur_blocked->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC)){
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Need to send IO back to original side to
* run
*/
union ctl_ha_msg msg_info;
cur_blocked->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg_info.hdr.original_sc =
cur_blocked->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = cur_blocked;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_R2R;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.hdr), M_NOWAIT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(&cur_blocked->scsiio, NULL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Check this I/O for LUN state changes that may
* have happened while this command was blocked.
* The LUN state may have been changed by a command
* ahead of us in the queue, so we need to re-check
* for any states that can be caused by SCSI
* commands.
*/
if (ctl_scsiio_lun_check(lun, entry,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
&cur_blocked->scsiio) == 0) {
cur_blocked->io_hdr.flags |=
CTL_FLAG_IS_WAS_ON_RTR;
ctl_enqueue_rtr(cur_blocked);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else
ctl_done(cur_blocked);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
default:
/*
* This probably shouldn't happen -- we shouldn't
* get CTL_ACTION_ERROR, or anything else.
*/
break;
}
}
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
/*
* This routine (with one exception) checks LUN flags that can be set by
* commands ahead of us in the OOA queue. These flags have to be checked
* when a command initially comes in, and when we pull a command off the
* blocked queue and are preparing to execute it. The reason we have to
* check these flags for commands on the blocked queue is that the LUN
* state may have been changed by a command ahead of us while we're on the
* blocked queue.
*
* Ordering is somewhat important with these checks, so please pay
* careful attention to the placement of any new checks.
*/
static int
ctl_scsiio_lun_check(struct ctl_lun *lun,
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry, struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int retval;
uint32_t residx;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = 0;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If this shelf is a secondary shelf controller, we may have to
* reject some commands disallowed by HA mode and link state.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) == 0) {
if (softc->ha_link == CTL_HA_LINK_OFFLINE &&
(entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_UNAVAIL) == 0) {
ctl_set_lun_unavail(ctsio);
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PEER_SC_PRIMARY) == 0 &&
(entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_UNAVAIL) == 0) {
ctl_set_lun_transit(ctsio);
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
if (softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_ACT_STBY &&
(entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_STANDBY) == 0) {
ctl_set_lun_standby(ctsio);
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
/* The rest of checks are only done on executing side */
if (softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER)
goto bailout;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if (entry->pattern & CTL_LUN_PAT_WRITE) {
if (lun->be_lun &&
lun->be_lun->flags & CTL_LUN_FLAG_READONLY) {
2015-09-13 16:49:41 +00:00
ctl_set_hw_write_protected(ctsio);
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
if ((lun->mode_pages.control_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT]
.eca_and_aen & SCP_SWP) != 0) {
ctl_set_sense(ctsio, /*current_error*/ 1,
/*sense_key*/ SSD_KEY_DATA_PROTECT,
/*asc*/ 0x27, /*ascq*/ 0x02, SSD_ELEM_NONE);
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Check for a reservation conflict. If this command isn't allowed
* even on reserved LUNs, and if this initiator isn't the one who
* reserved us, reject the command with a reservation conflict.
*/
residx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_RESERVED)
&& ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_ALLOW_ON_RESV) == 0)) {
if (lun->res_idx != residx) {
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
}
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PR_RESERVED) == 0 ||
(entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_ALLOW_ON_PR_RESV)) {
/* No reservation or command is allowed. */;
} else if ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_ALLOW_ON_PR_WRESV) &&
(lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_WR_EX ||
lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_RO ||
lun->res_type == SPR_TYPE_WR_EX_AR)) {
/* The command is allowed for Write Exclusive resv. */;
} else {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* if we aren't registered or it's a res holder type
* reservation and this isn't the res holder then set a
* conflict.
*/
if (ctl_get_prkey(lun, residx) == 0
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
|| (residx != lun->pr_res_idx && lun->res_type < 4)) {
ctl_set_reservation_conflict(ctsio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
}
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_OFFLINE)
&& ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_STANDBY) == 0)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_lun_not_ready(ctsio);
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_STOPPED)
&& ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_STOPPED) == 0)) {
/* "Logical unit not ready, initializing cmd. required" */
ctl_set_lun_stopped(ctsio);
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_INOPERABLE)
&& ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_INOPERABLE) == 0)) {
/* "Medium format corrupted" */
ctl_set_medium_format_corrupted(ctsio);
retval = 1;
goto bailout;
}
bailout:
return (retval);
}
static void
ctl_failover_io(union ctl_io *io, int have_lock)
{
ctl_set_busy(&io->scsiio);
ctl_done(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static void
ctl_failover_lun(struct ctl_lun *lun)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = lun->ctl_softc;
struct ctl_io_hdr *io, *next_io;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("FAILOVER for lun %ju\n", lun->lun));
if (softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER) {
TAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE(io, &lun->ooa_queue, ooa_links, next_io) {
/* We are master */
if (io->flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC) {
if (io->flags & CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE) {
io->flags |= CTL_FLAG_ABORT;
io->flags |= CTL_FLAG_FAILOVER;
} else { /* This can be only due to DATAMOVE */
io->msg_type = CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE_DONE;
io->flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_DMA_INPROG;
io->flags |= CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
io->port_status = 31340;
ctl_enqueue_isc((union ctl_io *)io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
/* We are slave */
if (io->flags & CTL_FLAG_SENT_2OTHER_SC) {
io->flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_SENT_2OTHER_SC;
if (io->flags & CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE) {
io->flags |= CTL_FLAG_FAILOVER;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
ctl_set_busy(&((union ctl_io *)io)->
scsiio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
}
} else { /* SERIALIZE modes */
TAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE(io, &lun->blocked_queue, blocked_links,
next_io) {
/* We are master */
if (io->flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->blocked_queue, io,
blocked_links);
io->flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_BLOCKED;
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->ooa_queue, io, ooa_links);
ctl_free_io((union ctl_io *)io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
TAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE(io, &lun->ooa_queue, ooa_links, next_io) {
/* We are master */
if (io->flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->ooa_queue, io, ooa_links);
ctl_free_io((union ctl_io *)io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/* We are slave */
if (io->flags & CTL_FLAG_SENT_2OTHER_SC) {
io->flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_SENT_2OTHER_SC;
if (!(io->flags & CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE)) {
ctl_set_busy(&((union ctl_io *)io)->
scsiio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
}
ctl_check_blocked(lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
static int
ctl_scsiio_precheck(struct ctl_softc *softc, struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
uint32_t initidx, targ_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int retval;
retval = 0;
lun = NULL;
targ_lun = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
if ((targ_lun < CTL_MAX_LUNS)
&& ((lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) != NULL)) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If the LUN is invalid, pretend that it doesn't exist.
* It will go away as soon as all pending I/O has been
* completed.
*/
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun = NULL;
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr = NULL;
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_BACKEND_LUN].ptr = NULL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr = lun;
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_BACKEND_LUN].ptr =
lun->be_lun;
/*
* Every I/O goes into the OOA queue for a
* particular LUN, and stays there until completion.
*/
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
if (TAILQ_EMPTY(&lun->ooa_queue)) {
lun->idle_time += getsbinuptime() -
lun->last_busy;
}
#endif
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&lun->ooa_queue, &ctsio->io_hdr,
ooa_links);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
} else {
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr = NULL;
ctsio->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_BACKEND_LUN].ptr = NULL;
}
/* Get command entry and return error if it is unsuppotyed. */
entry = ctl_validate_command(ctsio);
if (entry == NULL) {
if (lun)
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
return (retval);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctsio->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= entry->flags & CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK;
/*
* Check to see whether we can send this command to LUNs that don't
* exist. This should pretty much only be the case for inquiry
* and request sense. Further checks, below, really require having
* a LUN, so we can't really check the command anymore. Just put
* it on the rtr queue.
*/
if (lun == NULL) {
if (entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_NO_LUN) {
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IS_WAS_ON_RTR;
ctl_enqueue_rtr((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_unsupported_lun(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_scsiio_precheck: bailing out due to invalid LUN\n"));
return (retval);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
/*
* Make sure we support this particular command on this LUN.
* e.g., we don't support writes to the control LUN.
*/
if (!ctl_cmd_applicable(lun->be_lun->lun_type, entry)) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&ctsio->io_hdr.nexus);
#ifdef CTL_WITH_CA
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If we've got a request sense, it'll clear the contingent
* allegiance condition. Otherwise, if we have a CA condition for
* this initiator, clear it, because it sent down a command other
* than request sense.
*/
if ((ctsio->cdb[0] != REQUEST_SENSE)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
&& (ctl_is_set(lun->have_ca, initidx)))
ctl_clear_mask(lun->have_ca, initidx);
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If the command has this flag set, it handles its own unit
* attention reporting, we shouldn't do anything. Otherwise we
* check for any pending unit attentions, and send them back to the
* initiator. We only do this when a command initially comes in,
* not when we pull it off the blocked queue.
*
* According to SAM-3, section 5.3.2, the order that things get
* presented back to the host is basically unit attentions caused
* by some sort of reset event, busy status, reservation conflicts
* or task set full, and finally any other status.
*
* One issue here is that some of the unit attentions we report
* don't fall into the "reset" category (e.g. "reported luns data
* has changed"). So reporting it here, before the reservation
* check, may be technically wrong. I guess the only thing to do
* would be to check for and report the reset events here, and then
* check for the other unit attention types after we check for a
* reservation conflict.
*
* XXX KDM need to fix this
*/
if ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_NO_SENSE) == 0) {
ctl_ua_type ua_type;
ua_type = ctl_build_ua(lun, initidx, &ctsio->sense_data,
SSD_TYPE_NONE);
if (ua_type != CTL_UA_NONE) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctsio->scsi_status = SCSI_STATUS_CHECK_COND;
ctsio->io_hdr.status = CTL_SCSI_ERROR | CTL_AUTOSENSE;
ctsio->sense_len = SSD_FULL_SIZE;
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
if (ctl_scsiio_lun_check(lun, entry, ctsio) != 0) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* XXX CHD this is where we want to send IO to other side if
* this LUN is secondary on this SC. We will need to make a copy
* of the IO and flag the IO on this side as SENT_2OTHER and the flag
* the copy we send as FROM_OTHER.
* We also need to stuff the address of the original IO so we can
* find it easily. Something similar will need be done on the other
* side so when we are done we can find the copy.
*/
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) == 0 &&
(lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PEER_SC_PRIMARY) != 0 &&
(entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_RUN_HERE) == 0) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
union ctl_ha_msg msg_info;
int isc_retval;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_SENT_2OTHER_SC;
ctsio->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_SERIALIZE;
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = (union ctl_io *)ctsio;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.nexus = ctsio->io_hdr.nexus;
msg_info.scsi.tag_num = ctsio->tag_num;
msg_info.scsi.tag_type = ctsio->tag_type;
msg_info.scsi.cdb_len = ctsio->cdb_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
memcpy(msg_info.scsi.cdb, ctsio->cdb, CTL_MAX_CDBLEN);
if ((isc_retval = ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.scsi) - sizeof(msg_info.scsi.sense_data),
M_WAITOK)) > CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS) {
ctl_set_busy(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (retval);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
return (retval);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
switch (ctl_check_ooa(lun, (union ctl_io *)ctsio,
(union ctl_io *)TAILQ_PREV(&ctsio->io_hdr,
ctl_ooaq, ooa_links))) {
case CTL_ACTION_BLOCK:
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_BLOCKED;
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&lun->blocked_queue, &ctsio->io_hdr,
blocked_links);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
return (retval);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case CTL_ACTION_PASS:
case CTL_ACTION_SKIP:
ctsio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IS_WAS_ON_RTR;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_enqueue_rtr((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP:
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_overlapped_cmd(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case CTL_ACTION_OVERLAP_TAG:
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_overlapped_tag(ctsio, ctsio->tag_num & 0xff);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
case CTL_ACTION_ERROR:
default:
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_internal_failure(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 0,
/*retry_count*/ 0);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
return (retval);
}
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *
ctl_get_cmd_entry(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, int *sa)
{
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
int service_action;
entry = &ctl_cmd_table[ctsio->cdb[0]];
if (sa)
*sa = ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_SA5) != 0);
if (entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_SA5) {
service_action = ctsio->cdb[1] & SERVICE_ACTION_MASK;
entry = &((const struct ctl_cmd_entry *)
entry->execute)[service_action];
}
return (entry);
}
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *
ctl_validate_command(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
int i, sa;
uint8_t diff;
entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(ctsio, &sa);
if (entry->execute == NULL) {
if (sa)
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ 1,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ 4);
else
ctl_set_invalid_opcode(ctsio);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (NULL);
}
KASSERT(entry->length > 0,
("Not defined length for command 0x%02x/0x%02x",
ctsio->cdb[0], ctsio->cdb[1]));
for (i = 1; i < entry->length; i++) {
diff = ctsio->cdb[i] & ~entry->usage[i - 1];
if (diff == 0)
continue;
ctl_set_invalid_field(ctsio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*command*/ 1,
/*field*/ i,
/*bit_valid*/ 1,
/*bit*/ fls(diff) - 1);
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
return (NULL);
}
return (entry);
}
static int
ctl_cmd_applicable(uint8_t lun_type, const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry)
{
switch (lun_type) {
case T_PROCESSOR:
if ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_PROC) == 0)
return (0);
break;
case T_DIRECT:
if ((entry->flags & CTL_CMD_FLAG_OK_ON_SLUN) == 0)
return (0);
break;
default:
return (0);
}
return (1);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int
ctl_scsiio(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio)
{
int retval;
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
retval = CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_scsiio cdb[0]=%02X\n", ctsio->cdb[0]));
entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(ctsio, NULL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If this I/O has been aborted, just send it straight to
* ctl_done() without executing it.
*/
if (ctsio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT) {
ctl_done((union ctl_io *)ctsio);
goto bailout;
}
/*
* All the checks should have been handled by ctl_scsiio_precheck().
* We should be clear now to just execute the I/O.
*/
retval = entry->execute(ctsio);
bailout:
return (retval);
}
/*
* Since we only implement one target right now, a bus reset simply resets
* our single target.
*/
static int
ctl_bus_reset(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_io *io)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
return(ctl_target_reset(softc, io, CTL_UA_BUS_RESET));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static int
ctl_target_reset(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_io *io,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_ua_type ua_type)
{
2015-09-13 13:00:20 +00:00
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_lun *lun;
int retval;
if (!(io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC)) {
union ctl_ha_msg msg_info;
msg_info.hdr.nexus = io->io_hdr.nexus;
if (ua_type==CTL_UA_TARG_RESET)
msg_info.task.task_action = CTL_TASK_TARGET_RESET;
else
msg_info.task.task_action = CTL_TASK_BUS_RESET;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_MANAGE_TASKS;
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.task), M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
retval = 0;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
2015-09-13 13:00:20 +00:00
port = softc->ctl_ports[io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port];
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
if (port != NULL &&
ctl_lun_map_to_port(port, lun->lun) >= CTL_MAX_LUNS)
continue;
retval += ctl_do_lun_reset(lun, io, ua_type);
2015-09-13 13:00:20 +00:00
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_COMPLETE;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (retval);
}
/*
* The LUN should always be set. The I/O is optional, and is used to
* distinguish between I/Os sent by this initiator, and by other
* initiators. We set unit attention for initiators other than this one.
* SAM-3 is vague on this point. It does say that a unit attention should
* be established for other initiators when a LUN is reset (see section
* 5.7.3), but it doesn't specifically say that the unit attention should
* be established for this particular initiator when a LUN is reset. Here
* is the relevant text, from SAM-3 rev 8:
*
* 5.7.2 When a SCSI initiator port aborts its own tasks
*
* When a SCSI initiator port causes its own task(s) to be aborted, no
* notification that the task(s) have been aborted shall be returned to
* the SCSI initiator port other than the completion response for the
* command or task management function action that caused the task(s) to
* be aborted and notification(s) associated with related effects of the
* action (e.g., a reset unit attention condition).
*
* XXX KDM for now, we're setting unit attention for all initiators.
*/
static int
ctl_do_lun_reset(struct ctl_lun *lun, union ctl_io *io, ctl_ua_type ua_type)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
union ctl_io *xio;
#if 0
uint32_t initidx;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
#ifdef CTL_WITH_CA
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int i;
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Run through the OOA queue and abort each I/O.
*/
for (xio = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_FIRST(&lun->ooa_queue); xio != NULL;
xio = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_NEXT(&xio->io_hdr, ooa_links)) {
xio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ABORT | CTL_FLAG_ABORT_STATUS;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* This version sets unit attention for every
*/
#if 0
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&io->io_hdr.nexus);
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, initidx, ua_type);
#else
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, -1, ua_type);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
/*
* A reset (any kind, really) clears reservations established with
* RESERVE/RELEASE. It does not clear reservations established
* with PERSISTENT RESERVE OUT, but we don't support that at the
* moment anyway. See SPC-2, section 5.6. SPC-3 doesn't address
* reservations made with the RESERVE/RELEASE commands, because
* those commands are obsolete in SPC-3.
*/
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_RESERVED;
#ifdef CTL_WITH_CA
for (i = 0; i < CTL_MAX_INITIATORS; i++)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_clear_mask(lun->have_ca, i);
#endif
2014-07-08 13:28:37 +00:00
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return (0);
}
static int
ctl_lun_reset(struct ctl_softc *softc, union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t targ_lun;
int retval;
targ_lun = io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) ||
(lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_LUN_DOES_NOT_EXIST;
return (1);
}
retval = ctl_do_lun_reset(lun, io, CTL_UA_LUN_RESET);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_COMPLETE;
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC) == 0) {
union ctl_ha_msg msg_info;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_MANAGE_TASKS;
msg_info.hdr.nexus = io->io_hdr.nexus;
msg_info.task.task_action = CTL_TASK_LUN_RESET;
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.task), M_WAITOK);
}
return (retval);
}
static void
ctl_abort_tasks_lun(struct ctl_lun *lun, uint32_t targ_port, uint32_t init_id,
int other_sc)
{
union ctl_io *xio;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
/*
* Run through the OOA queue and attempt to find the given I/O.
* The target port, initiator ID, tag type and tag number have to
* match the values that we got from the initiator. If we have an
* untagged command to abort, simply abort the first untagged command
* we come to. We only allow one untagged command at a time of course.
*/
for (xio = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_FIRST(&lun->ooa_queue); xio != NULL;
xio = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_NEXT(&xio->io_hdr, ooa_links)) {
if ((targ_port == UINT32_MAX ||
targ_port == xio->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port) &&
(init_id == UINT32_MAX ||
init_id == xio->io_hdr.nexus.initid)) {
if (targ_port != xio->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port ||
init_id != xio->io_hdr.nexus.initid)
xio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ABORT_STATUS;
xio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ABORT;
if (!other_sc && !(lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC)) {
union ctl_ha_msg msg_info;
msg_info.hdr.nexus = xio->io_hdr.nexus;
msg_info.task.task_action = CTL_TASK_ABORT_TASK;
msg_info.task.tag_num = xio->scsiio.tag_num;
msg_info.task.tag_type = xio->scsiio.tag_type;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_MANAGE_TASKS;
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.task), M_NOWAIT);
}
}
}
}
static int
ctl_abort_task_set(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t targ_lun;
/*
* Look up the LUN.
*/
targ_lun = io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) ||
(lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_LUN_DOES_NOT_EXIST;
return (1);
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (io->taskio.task_action == CTL_TASK_ABORT_TASK_SET) {
ctl_abort_tasks_lun(lun, io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port,
io->io_hdr.nexus.initid,
(io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC) != 0);
} else { /* CTL_TASK_CLEAR_TASK_SET */
ctl_abort_tasks_lun(lun, UINT32_MAX, UINT32_MAX,
(io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC) != 0);
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_COMPLETE;
return (0);
}
static int
ctl_i_t_nexus_reset(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
uint32_t initidx;
if (!(io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC)) {
union ctl_ha_msg msg_info;
msg_info.hdr.nexus = io->io_hdr.nexus;
msg_info.task.task_action = CTL_TASK_I_T_NEXUS_RESET;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_MANAGE_TASKS;
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.task), M_WAITOK);
}
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&io->io_hdr.nexus);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_abort_tasks_lun(lun, io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port,
io->io_hdr.nexus.initid, 1);
#ifdef CTL_WITH_CA
ctl_clear_mask(lun->have_ca, initidx);
#endif
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_RESERVED) && (lun->res_idx == initidx))
lun->flags &= ~CTL_LUN_RESERVED;
ctl_est_ua(lun, initidx, CTL_UA_I_T_NEXUS_LOSS);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_COMPLETE;
return (0);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
static int
ctl_abort_task(union ctl_io *io)
{
union ctl_io *xio;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
struct sbuf sb;
char printbuf[128];
#endif
int found;
uint32_t targ_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
found = 0;
/*
* Look up the LUN.
*/
targ_lun = io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) ||
(lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_LUN_DOES_NOT_EXIST;
return (1);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
printf("ctl_abort_task: called for lun %lld, tag %d type %d\n",
lun->lun, io->taskio.tag_num, io->taskio.tag_type);
#endif
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Run through the OOA queue and attempt to find the given I/O.
* The target port, initiator ID, tag type and tag number have to
* match the values that we got from the initiator. If we have an
* untagged command to abort, simply abort the first untagged command
* we come to. We only allow one untagged command at a time of course.
*/
for (xio = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_FIRST(&lun->ooa_queue); xio != NULL;
xio = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_NEXT(&xio->io_hdr, ooa_links)) {
#if 0
sbuf_new(&sb, printbuf, sizeof(printbuf), SBUF_FIXEDLEN);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "LUN %lld tag %d type %d%s%s%s%s: ",
lun->lun, xio->scsiio.tag_num,
xio->scsiio.tag_type,
(xio->io_hdr.blocked_links.tqe_prev
== NULL) ? "" : " BLOCKED",
(xio->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_DMA_INPROG) ? " DMA" : "",
(xio->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_ABORT) ? " ABORT" : "",
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
(xio->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_IS_WAS_ON_RTR ? " RTR" : ""));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_scsi_command_string(&xio->scsiio, NULL, &sb);
sbuf_finish(&sb);
printf("%s\n", sbuf_data(&sb));
#endif
if ((xio->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port != io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port)
|| (xio->io_hdr.nexus.initid != io->io_hdr.nexus.initid)
|| (xio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT))
continue;
/*
* If the abort says that the task is untagged, the
* task in the queue must be untagged. Otherwise,
* we just check to see whether the tag numbers
* match. This is because the QLogic firmware
* doesn't pass back the tag type in an abort
* request.
*/
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
if (((xio->scsiio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_UNTAGGED)
&& (io->taskio.tag_type == CTL_TAG_UNTAGGED))
|| (xio->scsiio.tag_num == io->taskio.tag_num))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
/*
* XXX KDM we've got problems with FC, because it
* doesn't send down a tag type with aborts. So we
* can only really go by the tag number...
* This may cause problems with parallel SCSI.
* Need to figure that out!!
*/
if (xio->scsiio.tag_num == io->taskio.tag_num) {
xio->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ABORT;
found = 1;
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC) == 0 &&
!(lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC)) {
union ctl_ha_msg msg_info;
msg_info.hdr.nexus = io->io_hdr.nexus;
msg_info.task.task_action = CTL_TASK_ABORT_TASK;
msg_info.task.tag_num = io->taskio.tag_num;
msg_info.task.tag_type = io->taskio.tag_type;
msg_info.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_MANAGE_TASKS;
msg_info.hdr.original_sc = NULL;
msg_info.hdr.serializing_sc = NULL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
printf("Sent Abort to other side\n");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg_info,
sizeof(msg_info.task), M_NOWAIT);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
printf("ctl_abort_task: found I/O to abort\n");
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
}
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (found == 0) {
/*
* This isn't really an error. It's entirely possible for
* the abort and command completion to cross on the wire.
* This is more of an informative/diagnostic error.
*/
#if 0
printf("ctl_abort_task: ABORT sent for nonexistent I/O: "
"%u:%u:%u tag %d type %d\n",
io->io_hdr.nexus.initid,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port,
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_lun, io->taskio.tag_num,
io->taskio.tag_type);
#endif
}
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_COMPLETE;
return (0);
}
static int
ctl_query_task(union ctl_io *io, int task_set)
{
union ctl_io *xio;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
int found = 0;
uint32_t targ_lun;
softc = control_softc;
targ_lun = io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) ||
(lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_LUN_DOES_NOT_EXIST;
return (1);
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
for (xio = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_FIRST(&lun->ooa_queue); xio != NULL;
xio = (union ctl_io *)TAILQ_NEXT(&xio->io_hdr, ooa_links)) {
if ((xio->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port != io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port)
|| (xio->io_hdr.nexus.initid != io->io_hdr.nexus.initid)
|| (xio->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT))
continue;
if (task_set || xio->scsiio.tag_num == io->taskio.tag_num) {
found = 1;
break;
}
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (found)
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_SUCCEEDED;
else
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_COMPLETE;
return (0);
}
static int
ctl_query_async_event(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
ctl_ua_type ua;
uint32_t targ_lun, initidx;
softc = control_softc;
targ_lun = io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if ((targ_lun >= CTL_MAX_LUNS) ||
(lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun]) == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_LUN_DOES_NOT_EXIST;
return (1);
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&io->io_hdr.nexus);
ua = ctl_build_qae(lun, initidx, io->taskio.task_resp);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (ua != CTL_UA_NONE)
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_SUCCEEDED;
else
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_COMPLETE;
return (0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static void
ctl_run_task(union ctl_io *io)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
int retval = 1;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_run_task\n"));
KASSERT(io->io_hdr.io_type == CTL_IO_TASK,
("ctl_run_task: Unextected io_type %d\n", io->io_hdr.io_type));
io->taskio.task_status = CTL_TASK_FUNCTION_NOT_SUPPORTED;
bzero(io->taskio.task_resp, sizeof(io->taskio.task_resp));
switch (io->taskio.task_action) {
case CTL_TASK_ABORT_TASK:
retval = ctl_abort_task(io);
break;
case CTL_TASK_ABORT_TASK_SET:
case CTL_TASK_CLEAR_TASK_SET:
retval = ctl_abort_task_set(io);
break;
case CTL_TASK_CLEAR_ACA:
break;
case CTL_TASK_I_T_NEXUS_RESET:
retval = ctl_i_t_nexus_reset(io);
break;
case CTL_TASK_LUN_RESET:
retval = ctl_lun_reset(softc, io);
break;
case CTL_TASK_TARGET_RESET:
retval = ctl_target_reset(softc, io, CTL_UA_TARG_RESET);
break;
case CTL_TASK_BUS_RESET:
retval = ctl_bus_reset(softc, io);
break;
case CTL_TASK_PORT_LOGIN:
break;
case CTL_TASK_PORT_LOGOUT:
break;
case CTL_TASK_QUERY_TASK:
retval = ctl_query_task(io, 0);
break;
case CTL_TASK_QUERY_TASK_SET:
retval = ctl_query_task(io, 1);
break;
case CTL_TASK_QUERY_ASYNC_EVENT:
retval = ctl_query_async_event(io);
break;
default:
printf("%s: got unknown task management event %d\n",
__func__, io->taskio.task_action);
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
if (retval == 0)
io->io_hdr.status = CTL_SUCCESS;
else
io->io_hdr.status = CTL_ERROR;
ctl_done(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* For HA operation. Handle commands that come in from the other
* controller.
*/
static void
ctl_handle_isc(union ctl_io *io)
{
int free_io;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
uint32_t targ_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
targ_lun = io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun;
lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun];
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (io->io_hdr.msg_type) {
case CTL_MSG_SERIALIZE:
free_io = ctl_serialize_other_sc_cmd(&io->scsiio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_MSG_R2R: {
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* This is only used in SER_ONLY mode.
*/
free_io = 0;
entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(&io->scsiio, NULL);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (ctl_scsiio_lun_check(lun,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
entry, (struct ctl_scsiio *)io) != 0) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_done(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_IS_WAS_ON_RTR;
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_enqueue_rtr(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
}
case CTL_MSG_FINISH_IO:
if (softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
free_io = 0;
ctl_done(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
free_io = 1;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->ooa_queue, &io->io_hdr,
ooa_links);
ctl_check_blocked(lun);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
break;
case CTL_MSG_PERS_ACTION:
ctl_hndl_per_res_out_on_other_sc(
(union ctl_ha_msg *)&io->presio.pr_msg);
free_io = 1;
break;
case CTL_MSG_BAD_JUJU:
free_io = 0;
ctl_done(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE:
/* Only used in XFER mode */
free_io = 0;
ctl_datamove_remote(io);
break;
case CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE_DONE:
/* Only used in XFER mode */
free_io = 0;
io->scsiio.be_move_done(io);
break;
case CTL_MSG_FAILOVER:
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
ctl_failover_lun(lun);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
free_io = 1;
break;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
default:
free_io = 1;
printf("%s: Invalid message type %d\n",
__func__, io->io_hdr.msg_type);
break;
}
if (free_io)
ctl_free_io(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* Returns the match type in the case of a match, or CTL_LUN_PAT_NONE if
* there is no match.
*/
static ctl_lun_error_pattern
ctl_cmd_pattern_match(struct ctl_scsiio *ctsio, struct ctl_error_desc *desc)
{
const struct ctl_cmd_entry *entry;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_lun_error_pattern filtered_pattern, pattern;
pattern = desc->error_pattern;
/*
* XXX KDM we need more data passed into this function to match a
* custom pattern, and we actually need to implement custom pattern
* matching.
*/
if (pattern & CTL_LUN_PAT_CMD)
return (CTL_LUN_PAT_CMD);
if ((pattern & CTL_LUN_PAT_MASK) == CTL_LUN_PAT_ANY)
return (CTL_LUN_PAT_ANY);
entry = ctl_get_cmd_entry(ctsio, NULL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
filtered_pattern = entry->pattern & pattern;
/*
* If the user requested specific flags in the pattern (e.g.
* CTL_LUN_PAT_RANGE), make sure the command supports all of those
* flags.
*
* If the user did not specify any flags, it doesn't matter whether
* or not the command supports the flags.
*/
if ((filtered_pattern & ~CTL_LUN_PAT_MASK) !=
(pattern & ~CTL_LUN_PAT_MASK))
return (CTL_LUN_PAT_NONE);
/*
* If the user asked for a range check, see if the requested LBA
* range overlaps with this command's LBA range.
*/
if (filtered_pattern & CTL_LUN_PAT_RANGE) {
uint64_t lba1;
uint64_t len1;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_action action;
int retval;
retval = ctl_get_lba_len((union ctl_io *)ctsio, &lba1, &len1);
if (retval != 0)
return (CTL_LUN_PAT_NONE);
action = ctl_extent_check_lba(lba1, len1, desc->lba_range.lba,
desc->lba_range.len, FALSE);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* A "pass" means that the LBA ranges don't overlap, so
* this doesn't match the user's range criteria.
*/
if (action == CTL_ACTION_PASS)
return (CTL_LUN_PAT_NONE);
}
return (filtered_pattern);
}
static void
ctl_inject_error(struct ctl_lun *lun, union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_error_desc *desc, *desc2;
mtx_assert(&lun->lun_lock, MA_OWNED);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
STAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE(desc, &lun->error_list, links, desc2) {
ctl_lun_error_pattern pattern;
/*
* Check to see whether this particular command matches
* the pattern in the descriptor.
*/
pattern = ctl_cmd_pattern_match(&io->scsiio, desc);
if ((pattern & CTL_LUN_PAT_MASK) == CTL_LUN_PAT_NONE)
continue;
switch (desc->lun_error & CTL_LUN_INJ_TYPE) {
case CTL_LUN_INJ_ABORTED:
ctl_set_aborted(&io->scsiio);
break;
case CTL_LUN_INJ_MEDIUM_ERR:
ctl_set_medium_error(&io->scsiio,
(io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK) !=
CTL_FLAG_DATA_OUT);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
case CTL_LUN_INJ_UA:
/* 29h/00h POWER ON, RESET, OR BUS DEVICE RESET
* OCCURRED */
ctl_set_ua(&io->scsiio, 0x29, 0x00);
break;
case CTL_LUN_INJ_CUSTOM:
/*
* We're assuming the user knows what he is doing.
* Just copy the sense information without doing
* checks.
*/
bcopy(&desc->custom_sense, &io->scsiio.sense_data,
MIN(sizeof(desc->custom_sense),
sizeof(io->scsiio.sense_data)));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->scsiio.scsi_status = SCSI_STATUS_CHECK_COND;
io->scsiio.sense_len = SSD_FULL_SIZE;
io->io_hdr.status = CTL_SCSI_ERROR | CTL_AUTOSENSE;
break;
case CTL_LUN_INJ_NONE:
default:
/*
* If this is an error injection type we don't know
* about, clear the continuous flag (if it is set)
* so it will get deleted below.
*/
desc->lun_error &= ~CTL_LUN_INJ_CONTINUOUS;
break;
}
/*
* By default, each error injection action is a one-shot
*/
if (desc->lun_error & CTL_LUN_INJ_CONTINUOUS)
continue;
STAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->error_list, desc, ctl_error_desc, links);
free(desc, M_CTL);
}
}
#ifdef CTL_IO_DELAY
static void
ctl_datamove_timer_wakeup(void *arg)
{
union ctl_io *io;
io = (union ctl_io *)arg;
ctl_datamove(io);
}
#endif /* CTL_IO_DELAY */
void
ctl_datamove(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
void (*fe_datamove)(union ctl_io *io);
mtx_assert(&control_softc->ctl_lock, MA_NOTOWNED);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_datamove\n"));
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)io->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
if ((time_uptime - io->io_hdr.start_time) > ctl_time_io_secs) {
char str[256];
char path_str[64];
struct sbuf sb;
ctl_scsi_path_string(io, path_str, sizeof(path_str));
sbuf_new(&sb, str, sizeof(str), SBUF_FIXEDLEN);
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
switch (io->io_hdr.io_type) {
case CTL_IO_SCSI:
ctl_scsi_command_string(&io->scsiio, NULL, &sb);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "\n");
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "Tag: 0x%04x, type %d\n",
io->scsiio.tag_num, io->scsiio.tag_type);
break;
case CTL_IO_TASK:
sbuf_printf(&sb, "Task I/O type: %d, Tag: 0x%04x, "
"Tag Type: %d\n", io->taskio.task_action,
io->taskio.tag_num, io->taskio.tag_type);
break;
default:
printf("Invalid CTL I/O type %d\n", io->io_hdr.io_type);
panic("Invalid CTL I/O type %d\n", io->io_hdr.io_type);
break;
}
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "ctl_datamove: %jd seconds\n",
(intmax_t)time_uptime - io->io_hdr.start_time);
sbuf_finish(&sb);
printf("%s", sbuf_data(&sb));
}
#endif /* CTL_TIME_IO */
#ifdef CTL_IO_DELAY
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DELAY_DONE) {
io->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_DELAY_DONE;
} else {
if ((lun != NULL)
&& (lun->delay_info.datamove_delay > 0)) {
callout_init(&io->io_hdr.delay_callout, /*mpsafe*/ 1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_DELAY_DONE;
callout_reset(&io->io_hdr.delay_callout,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->delay_info.datamove_delay * hz,
ctl_datamove_timer_wakeup, io);
if (lun->delay_info.datamove_type ==
CTL_DELAY_TYPE_ONESHOT)
lun->delay_info.datamove_delay = 0;
return;
}
}
#endif
/*
* This command has been aborted. Set the port status, so we fail
* the data move.
*/
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT) {
printf("ctl_datamove: tag 0x%04x on (%u:%u:%u) aborted\n",
io->scsiio.tag_num, io->io_hdr.nexus.initid,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port,
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_lun);
io->io_hdr.port_status = 31337;
/*
* Note that the backend, in this case, will get the
* callback in its context. In other cases it may get
* called in the frontend's interrupt thread context.
*/
io->scsiio.be_move_done(io);
return;
}
/* Don't confuse frontend with zero length data move. */
if (io->scsiio.kern_data_len == 0) {
io->scsiio.be_move_done(io);
return;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If we're in XFER mode and this I/O is from the other shelf
* controller, we need to send the DMA to the other side to
* actually transfer the data to/from the host. In serialize only
* mode the transfer happens below CTL and ctl_datamove() is only
* called on the machine that originally received the I/O.
*/
if ((control_softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER)
&& (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC)) {
union ctl_ha_msg msg;
uint32_t sg_entries_sent;
int do_sg_copy;
int i;
memset(&msg, 0, sizeof(msg));
msg.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE;
msg.hdr.original_sc = io->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg.hdr.serializing_sc = io;
msg.hdr.nexus = io->io_hdr.nexus;
msg.hdr.status = io->io_hdr.status;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg.dt.flags = io->io_hdr.flags;
/*
* We convert everything into a S/G list here. We can't
* pass by reference, only by value between controllers.
* So we can't pass a pointer to the S/G list, only as many
* S/G entries as we can fit in here. If it's possible for
* us to get more than CTL_HA_MAX_SG_ENTRIES S/G entries,
* then we need to break this up into multiple transfers.
*/
if (io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries == 0) {
msg.dt.kern_sg_entries = 1;
#if 0
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Convert to a physical address if this is a
* virtual address.
*/
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_BUS_ADDR) {
msg.dt.sg_list[0].addr =
io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr;
} else {
/*
* XXX KDM use busdma here!
*/
msg.dt.sg_list[0].addr = (void *)
vtophys(io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr);
}
#else
KASSERT((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_BUS_ADDR) == 0,
("HA does not support BUS_ADDR"));
msg.dt.sg_list[0].addr = io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr;
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg.dt.sg_list[0].len = io->scsiio.kern_data_len;
do_sg_copy = 0;
} else {
msg.dt.kern_sg_entries = io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries;
do_sg_copy = 1;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
msg.dt.kern_data_len = io->scsiio.kern_data_len;
msg.dt.kern_total_len = io->scsiio.kern_total_len;
msg.dt.kern_data_resid = io->scsiio.kern_data_resid;
msg.dt.kern_rel_offset = io->scsiio.kern_rel_offset;
msg.dt.sg_sequence = 0;
/*
* Loop until we've sent all of the S/G entries. On the
* other end, we'll recompose these S/G entries into one
* contiguous list before passing it to the
*/
for (sg_entries_sent = 0; sg_entries_sent <
msg.dt.kern_sg_entries; msg.dt.sg_sequence++) {
msg.dt.cur_sg_entries = MIN((sizeof(msg.dt.sg_list)/
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
sizeof(msg.dt.sg_list[0])),
msg.dt.kern_sg_entries - sg_entries_sent);
if (do_sg_copy != 0) {
struct ctl_sg_entry *sgl;
int j;
sgl = (struct ctl_sg_entry *)
io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr;
/*
* If this is in cached memory, flush the cache
* before we send the DMA request to the other
* controller. We want to do this in either
* the * read or the write case. The read
* case is straightforward. In the write
* case, we want to make sure nothing is
* in the local cache that could overwrite
* the DMAed data.
*/
for (i = sg_entries_sent, j = 0;
i < msg.dt.cur_sg_entries; i++, j++) {
#if 0
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if ((io->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_BUS_ADDR) == 0) {
/*
* XXX KDM use busdma.
*/
msg.dt.sg_list[j].addr =(void *)
vtophys(sgl[i].addr);
} else {
msg.dt.sg_list[j].addr =
sgl[i].addr;
}
#else
KASSERT((io->io_hdr.flags &
CTL_FLAG_BUS_ADDR) == 0,
("HA does not support BUS_ADDR"));
msg.dt.sg_list[j].addr = sgl[i].addr;
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg.dt.sg_list[j].len = sgl[i].len;
}
}
sg_entries_sent += msg.dt.cur_sg_entries;
if (sg_entries_sent >= msg.dt.kern_sg_entries)
msg.dt.sg_last = 1;
else
msg.dt.sg_last = 0;
if (ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg,
sizeof(msg.dt) - sizeof(msg.dt.sg_list) +
sizeof(struct ctl_sg_entry)*msg.dt.cur_sg_entries,
M_WAITOK) > CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS) {
io->io_hdr.port_status = 31341;
io->scsiio.be_move_done(io);
return;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
msg.dt.sent_sg_entries = sg_entries_sent;
}
/*
* Officially handover the request from us to peer.
* If failover has just happened, then we must return error.
* If failover happen just after, then it is not our problem.
*/
if (lun)
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FAILOVER) {
if (lun)
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
io->io_hdr.port_status = 31342;
io->scsiio.be_move_done(io);
return;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_DMA_INPROG;
if (lun)
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else {
/*
* Lookup the fe_datamove() function for this particular
* front end.
*/
fe_datamove = ctl_io_port(&io->io_hdr)->fe_datamove;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
fe_datamove(io);
}
}
static void
ctl_send_datamove_done(union ctl_io *io, int have_lock)
{
union ctl_ha_msg msg;
memset(&msg, 0, sizeof(msg));
msg.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_DATAMOVE_DONE;
msg.hdr.original_sc = io;
msg.hdr.serializing_sc = io->io_hdr.serializing_sc;
msg.hdr.nexus = io->io_hdr.nexus;
msg.hdr.status = io->io_hdr.status;
msg.scsi.tag_num = io->scsiio.tag_num;
msg.scsi.tag_type = io->scsiio.tag_type;
msg.scsi.scsi_status = io->scsiio.scsi_status;
memcpy(&msg.scsi.sense_data, &io->scsiio.sense_data,
io->scsiio.sense_len);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
msg.scsi.sense_len = io->scsiio.sense_len;
msg.scsi.sense_residual = io->scsiio.sense_residual;
msg.scsi.fetd_status = io->io_hdr.port_status;
msg.scsi.residual = io->scsiio.residual;
io->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_IO_ACTIVE;
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FAILOVER) {
ctl_failover_io(io, /*have_lock*/ have_lock);
return;
}
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg,
sizeof(msg.scsi) - sizeof(msg.scsi.sense_data) +
msg.scsi.sense_len, M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* The DMA to the remote side is done, now we need to tell the other side
* we're done so it can continue with its data movement.
*/
static void
ctl_datamove_remote_write_cb(struct ctl_ha_dt_req *rq)
{
union ctl_io *io;
int i;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io = rq->context;
if (rq->ret != CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS) {
printf("%s: ISC DMA write failed with error %d", __func__,
rq->ret);
ctl_set_internal_failure(&io->scsiio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*retry_count*/ rq->ret);
}
ctl_dt_req_free(rq);
for (i = 0; i < io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries; i++)
free(io->io_hdr.local_sglist[i].addr, M_CTL);
free(io->io_hdr.remote_sglist, M_CTL);
io->io_hdr.remote_sglist = NULL;
io->io_hdr.local_sglist = NULL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* The data is in local and remote memory, so now we need to send
* status (good or back) back to the other side.
*/
ctl_send_datamove_done(io, /*have_lock*/ 0);
}
/*
* We've moved the data from the host/controller into local memory. Now we
* need to push it over to the remote controller's memory.
*/
static int
ctl_datamove_remote_dm_write_cb(union ctl_io *io)
{
int retval;
retval = ctl_datamove_remote_xfer(io, CTL_HA_DT_CMD_WRITE,
ctl_datamove_remote_write_cb);
return (retval);
}
static void
ctl_datamove_remote_write(union ctl_io *io)
{
int retval;
void (*fe_datamove)(union ctl_io *io);
/*
* - Get the data from the host/HBA into local memory.
* - DMA memory from the local controller to the remote controller.
* - Send status back to the remote controller.
*/
retval = ctl_datamove_remote_sgl_setup(io);
if (retval != 0)
return;
/* Switch the pointer over so the FETD knows what to do */
io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr = (uint8_t *)io->io_hdr.local_sglist;
/*
* Use a custom move done callback, since we need to send completion
* back to the other controller, not to the backend on this side.
*/
io->scsiio.be_move_done = ctl_datamove_remote_dm_write_cb;
fe_datamove = ctl_io_port(&io->io_hdr)->fe_datamove;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
fe_datamove(io);
}
static int
ctl_datamove_remote_dm_read_cb(union ctl_io *io)
{
#if 0
char str[256];
char path_str[64];
struct sbuf sb;
#endif
int i;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries; i++)
free(io->io_hdr.local_sglist[i].addr, M_CTL);
free(io->io_hdr.remote_sglist, M_CTL);
io->io_hdr.remote_sglist = NULL;
io->io_hdr.local_sglist = NULL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
scsi_path_string(io, path_str, sizeof(path_str));
sbuf_new(&sb, str, sizeof(str), SBUF_FIXEDLEN);
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
scsi_command_string(&io->scsiio, NULL, &sb);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "\n");
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "Tag: 0x%04x, type %d\n",
io->scsiio.tag_num, io->scsiio.tag_type);
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "%s: flags %#x, status %#x\n", __func__,
io->io_hdr.flags, io->io_hdr.status);
sbuf_finish(&sb);
printk("%s", sbuf_data(&sb));
#endif
/*
* The read is done, now we need to send status (good or bad) back
* to the other side.
*/
ctl_send_datamove_done(io, /*have_lock*/ 0);
return (0);
}
static void
ctl_datamove_remote_read_cb(struct ctl_ha_dt_req *rq)
{
union ctl_io *io;
void (*fe_datamove)(union ctl_io *io);
io = rq->context;
if (rq->ret != CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS) {
printf("%s: ISC DMA read failed with error %d\n", __func__,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
rq->ret);
ctl_set_internal_failure(&io->scsiio,
/*sks_valid*/ 1,
/*retry_count*/ rq->ret);
}
ctl_dt_req_free(rq);
/* Switch the pointer over so the FETD knows what to do */
io->scsiio.kern_data_ptr = (uint8_t *)io->io_hdr.local_sglist;
/*
* Use a custom move done callback, since we need to send completion
* back to the other controller, not to the backend on this side.
*/
io->scsiio.be_move_done = ctl_datamove_remote_dm_read_cb;
/* XXX KDM add checks like the ones in ctl_datamove? */
fe_datamove = ctl_io_port(&io->io_hdr)->fe_datamove;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
fe_datamove(io);
}
static int
ctl_datamove_remote_sgl_setup(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_sg_entry *local_sglist;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
struct ctl_softc *softc;
uint32_t len_to_go;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
int retval;
int i;
retval = 0;
softc = control_softc;
local_sglist = io->io_hdr.local_sglist;
len_to_go = io->scsiio.kern_data_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* The difficult thing here is that the size of the various
* S/G segments may be different than the size from the
* remote controller. That'll make it harder when DMAing
* the data back to the other side.
*/
for (i = 0; len_to_go > 0; i++) {
local_sglist[i].len = MIN(len_to_go, CTL_HA_DATAMOVE_SEGMENT);
local_sglist[i].addr =
malloc(local_sglist[i].len, M_CTL, M_WAITOK);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
len_to_go -= local_sglist[i].len;
}
/*
* Reset the number of S/G entries accordingly. The original
* number of S/G entries is available in rem_sg_entries.
*/
io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries = i;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#if 0
printf("%s: kern_sg_entries = %d\n", __func__,
io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries);
for (i = 0; i < io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries; i++)
printf("%s: sg[%d] = %p, %lu\n", __func__, i,
local_sglist[i].addr, local_sglist[i].len);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
return (retval);
}
static int
ctl_datamove_remote_xfer(union ctl_io *io, unsigned command,
ctl_ha_dt_cb callback)
{
struct ctl_ha_dt_req *rq;
struct ctl_sg_entry *remote_sglist, *local_sglist;
uint32_t local_used, remote_used, total_used;
int i, j, isc_ret;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
rq = ctl_dt_req_alloc();
/*
* If we failed to allocate the request, and if the DMA didn't fail
* anyway, set busy status. This is just a resource allocation
* failure.
*/
if ((rq == NULL)
&& ((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_STATUS_NONE &&
(io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_SUCCESS))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_set_busy(&io->scsiio);
if ((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_STATUS_NONE &&
(io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_SUCCESS) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (rq != NULL)
ctl_dt_req_free(rq);
/*
* The data move failed. We need to return status back
* to the other controller. No point in trying to DMA
* data to the remote controller.
*/
ctl_send_datamove_done(io, /*have_lock*/ 0);
return (1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
local_sglist = io->io_hdr.local_sglist;
remote_sglist = io->io_hdr.remote_sglist;
local_used = 0;
remote_used = 0;
total_used = 0;
/*
* Pull/push the data over the wire from/to the other controller.
* This takes into account the possibility that the local and
* remote sglists may not be identical in terms of the size of
* the elements and the number of elements.
*
* One fundamental assumption here is that the length allocated for
* both the local and remote sglists is identical. Otherwise, we've
* essentially got a coding error of some sort.
*/
isc_ret = CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
for (i = 0, j = 0; total_used < io->scsiio.kern_data_len; ) {
uint32_t cur_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
uint8_t *tmp_ptr;
rq->command = command;
rq->context = io;
/*
* Both pointers should be aligned. But it is possible
* that the allocation length is not. They should both
* also have enough slack left over at the end, though,
* to round up to the next 8 byte boundary.
*/
cur_len = MIN(local_sglist[i].len - local_used,
remote_sglist[j].len - remote_used);
rq->size = cur_len;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
tmp_ptr = (uint8_t *)local_sglist[i].addr;
tmp_ptr += local_used;
#if 0
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* Use physical addresses when talking to ISC hardware */
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_BUS_ADDR) == 0) {
/* XXX KDM use busdma */
rq->local = vtophys(tmp_ptr);
} else
rq->local = tmp_ptr;
#else
KASSERT((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_BUS_ADDR) == 0,
("HA does not support BUS_ADDR"));
rq->local = tmp_ptr;
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
tmp_ptr = (uint8_t *)remote_sglist[j].addr;
tmp_ptr += remote_used;
rq->remote = tmp_ptr;
rq->callback = NULL;
local_used += cur_len;
if (local_used >= local_sglist[i].len) {
i++;
local_used = 0;
}
remote_used += cur_len;
if (remote_used >= remote_sglist[j].len) {
j++;
remote_used = 0;
}
total_used += cur_len;
if (total_used >= io->scsiio.kern_data_len)
rq->callback = callback;
#if 0
printf("%s: %s: local %p remote %p size %d\n", __func__,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
(command == CTL_HA_DT_CMD_WRITE) ? "WRITE" : "READ",
rq->local, rq->remote, rq->size);
#endif
isc_ret = ctl_dt_single(rq);
if (isc_ret > CTL_HA_STATUS_SUCCESS)
break;
}
if (isc_ret != CTL_HA_STATUS_WAIT) {
rq->ret = isc_ret;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
callback(rq);
}
return (0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static void
ctl_datamove_remote_read(union ctl_io *io)
{
int retval;
int i;
/*
* This will send an error to the other controller in the case of a
* failure.
*/
retval = ctl_datamove_remote_sgl_setup(io);
if (retval != 0)
return;
retval = ctl_datamove_remote_xfer(io, CTL_HA_DT_CMD_READ,
ctl_datamove_remote_read_cb);
if (retval != 0) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Make sure we free memory if there was an error.. The
* ctl_datamove_remote_xfer() function will send the
* datamove done message, or call the callback with an
* error if there is a problem.
*/
for (i = 0; i < io->scsiio.kern_sg_entries; i++)
free(io->io_hdr.local_sglist[i].addr, M_CTL);
free(io->io_hdr.remote_sglist, M_CTL);
io->io_hdr.remote_sglist = NULL;
io->io_hdr.local_sglist = NULL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
/*
* Process a datamove request from the other controller. This is used for
* XFER mode only, not SER_ONLY mode. For writes, we DMA into local memory
* first. Once that is complete, the data gets DMAed into the remote
* controller's memory. For reads, we DMA from the remote controller's
* memory into our memory first, and then move it out to the FETD.
*/
static void
ctl_datamove_remote(union ctl_io *io)
{
mtx_assert(&control_softc->ctl_lock, MA_NOTOWNED);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FAILOVER) {
ctl_failover_io(io, /*have_lock*/ 0);
return;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Note that we look for an aborted I/O here, but don't do some of
* the other checks that ctl_datamove() normally does.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
* We don't need to run the datamove delay code, since that should
* have been done if need be on the other controller.
*/
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT) {
printf("%s: tag 0x%04x on (%u:%u:%u) aborted\n", __func__,
io->scsiio.tag_num, io->io_hdr.nexus.initid,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port,
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_lun);
io->io_hdr.port_status = 31338;
ctl_send_datamove_done(io, /*have_lock*/ 0);
return;
}
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK) == CTL_FLAG_DATA_OUT)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_datamove_remote_write(io);
else if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK) == CTL_FLAG_DATA_IN)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_datamove_remote_read(io);
else {
io->io_hdr.port_status = 31339;
ctl_send_datamove_done(io, /*have_lock*/ 0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
static int
ctl_process_done(union ctl_io *io)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
void (*fe_done)(union ctl_io *io);
union ctl_ha_msg msg;
uint32_t targ_port = io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_process_done\n"));
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC) == 0)
fe_done = softc->ctl_ports[targ_port]->fe_done;
else
fe_done = NULL;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
if ((time_uptime - io->io_hdr.start_time) > ctl_time_io_secs) {
char str[256];
char path_str[64];
struct sbuf sb;
ctl_scsi_path_string(io, path_str, sizeof(path_str));
sbuf_new(&sb, str, sizeof(str), SBUF_FIXEDLEN);
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
switch (io->io_hdr.io_type) {
case CTL_IO_SCSI:
ctl_scsi_command_string(&io->scsiio, NULL, &sb);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "\n");
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "Tag: 0x%04x, type %d\n",
io->scsiio.tag_num, io->scsiio.tag_type);
break;
case CTL_IO_TASK:
sbuf_printf(&sb, "Task I/O type: %d, Tag: 0x%04x, "
"Tag Type: %d\n", io->taskio.task_action,
io->taskio.tag_num, io->taskio.tag_type);
break;
default:
printf("Invalid CTL I/O type %d\n", io->io_hdr.io_type);
panic("Invalid CTL I/O type %d\n", io->io_hdr.io_type);
break;
}
sbuf_cat(&sb, path_str);
sbuf_printf(&sb, "ctl_process_done: %jd seconds\n",
(intmax_t)time_uptime - io->io_hdr.start_time);
sbuf_finish(&sb);
printf("%s", sbuf_data(&sb));
}
#endif /* CTL_TIME_IO */
switch (io->io_hdr.io_type) {
case CTL_IO_SCSI:
break;
case CTL_IO_TASK:
if (ctl_debug & CTL_DEBUG_INFO)
ctl_io_error_print(io, NULL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC)
ctl_free_io(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
else
fe_done(io);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
default:
panic("ctl_process_done: invalid io type %d\n",
io->io_hdr.io_type);
break; /* NOTREACHED */
}
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)io->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
if (lun == NULL) {
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("NULL LUN for lun %d\n",
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun));
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
goto bailout;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Check to see if we have any errors to inject here. We only
* inject errors for commands that don't already have errors set.
*/
if ((STAILQ_FIRST(&lun->error_list) != NULL) &&
((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) == CTL_SUCCESS) &&
((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_STATUS_SENT) == 0))
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_inject_error(lun, io);
/*
* XXX KDM how do we treat commands that aren't completed
* successfully?
*
* XXX KDM should we also track I/O latency?
*/
if ((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) == CTL_SUCCESS &&
io->io_hdr.io_type == CTL_IO_SCSI) {
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
struct bintime cur_bt;
#endif
int type;
if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK) ==
CTL_FLAG_DATA_IN)
type = CTL_STATS_READ;
else if ((io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DATA_MASK) ==
CTL_FLAG_DATA_OUT)
type = CTL_STATS_WRITE;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
else
type = CTL_STATS_NO_IO;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->stats.ports[targ_port].bytes[type] +=
io->scsiio.kern_total_len;
lun->stats.ports[targ_port].operations[type]++;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
bintime_add(&lun->stats.ports[targ_port].dma_time[type],
&io->io_hdr.dma_bt);
lun->stats.ports[targ_port].num_dmas[type] +=
io->io_hdr.num_dmas;
getbintime(&cur_bt);
bintime_sub(&cur_bt, &io->io_hdr.start_bt);
bintime_add(&lun->stats.ports[targ_port].time[type], &cur_bt);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
#endif
}
/*
* Remove this from the OOA queue.
*/
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
TAILQ_REMOVE(&lun->ooa_queue, &io->io_hdr, ooa_links);
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
if (TAILQ_EMPTY(&lun->ooa_queue))
lun->last_busy = getsbinuptime();
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Run through the blocked queue on this LUN and see if anything
* has become unblocked, now that this transaction is done.
*/
ctl_check_blocked(lun);
/*
* If the LUN has been invalidated, free it if there is nothing
* left on its OOA queue.
*/
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_INVALID)
&& TAILQ_EMPTY(&lun->ooa_queue)) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_free_lun(lun);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
} else
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
bailout:
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If this command has been aborted, make sure we set the status
* properly. The FETD is responsible for freeing the I/O and doing
* whatever it needs to do to clean up its state.
*/
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ABORT)
ctl_set_task_aborted(&io->scsiio);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If enabled, print command error status.
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
*/
if ((io->io_hdr.status & CTL_STATUS_MASK) != CTL_SUCCESS &&
(ctl_debug & CTL_DEBUG_INFO) != 0)
ctl_io_error_print(io, NULL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Tell the FETD or the other shelf controller we're done with this
* command. Note that only SCSI commands get to this point. Task
* management commands are completed above.
*/
if ((softc->ha_mode != CTL_HA_MODE_XFER) &&
(io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_SENT_2OTHER_SC)) {
memset(&msg, 0, sizeof(msg));
msg.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_FINISH_IO;
msg.hdr.serializing_sc = io->io_hdr.serializing_sc;
msg.hdr.nexus = io->io_hdr.nexus;
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg,
sizeof(msg.scsi) - sizeof(msg.scsi.sense_data),
M_WAITOK);
}
if ((softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
&& (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_FROM_OTHER_SC)) {
memset(&msg, 0, sizeof(msg));
msg.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_FINISH_IO;
msg.hdr.original_sc = io->io_hdr.original_sc;
msg.hdr.nexus = io->io_hdr.nexus;
msg.hdr.status = io->io_hdr.status;
msg.scsi.scsi_status = io->scsiio.scsi_status;
msg.scsi.tag_num = io->scsiio.tag_num;
msg.scsi.tag_type = io->scsiio.tag_type;
msg.scsi.sense_len = io->scsiio.sense_len;
msg.scsi.sense_residual = io->scsiio.sense_residual;
msg.scsi.residual = io->scsiio.residual;
memcpy(&msg.scsi.sense_data, &io->scsiio.sense_data,
io->scsiio.sense_len);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg,
sizeof(msg.scsi) - sizeof(msg.scsi.sense_data) +
msg.scsi.sense_len, M_WAITOK);
ctl_free_io(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
} else
fe_done(io);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
#ifdef CTL_WITH_CA
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Front end should call this if it doesn't do autosense. When the request
* sense comes back in from the initiator, we'll dequeue this and send it.
*/
int
ctl_queue_sense(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_port *port;
struct ctl_softc *softc;
uint32_t initidx, targ_lun;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
softc = control_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_queue_sense\n"));
/*
* LUN lookup will likely move to the ctl_work_thread() once we
* have our new queueing infrastructure (that doesn't put things on
* a per-LUN queue initially). That is so that we can handle
* things like an INQUIRY to a LUN that we don't have enabled. We
* can't deal with that right now.
*/
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* If we don't have a LUN for this, just toss the sense
* information.
*/
port = ctl_io_port(&ctsio->io_hdr);
targ_lun = ctl_lun_map_from_port(port, io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_lun);
if ((targ_lun < CTL_MAX_LUNS)
&& (softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun] != NULL))
lun = softc->ctl_luns[targ_lun];
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
else
goto bailout;
initidx = ctl_get_initindex(&io->io_hdr.nexus);
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Already have CA set for this LUN...toss the sense information.
*/
if (ctl_is_set(lun->have_ca, initidx)) {
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
goto bailout;
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
memcpy(&lun->pending_sense[initidx], &io->scsiio.sense_data,
MIN(sizeof(lun->pending_sense[initidx]),
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
sizeof(io->scsiio.sense_data)));
ctl_set_mask(lun->have_ca, initidx);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
bailout:
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_free_io(io);
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
#endif
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/*
* Primary command inlet from frontend ports. All SCSI and task I/O
* requests must go through this function.
*/
int
ctl_queue(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_port *port;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_queue cdb[0]=%02X\n", io->scsiio.cdb[0]));
#ifdef CTL_TIME_IO
io->io_hdr.start_time = time_uptime;
getbintime(&io->io_hdr.start_bt);
#endif /* CTL_TIME_IO */
/* Map FE-specific LUN ID into global one. */
port = ctl_io_port(&io->io_hdr);
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun =
ctl_lun_map_from_port(port, io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_lun);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
switch (io->io_hdr.io_type) {
case CTL_IO_SCSI:
case CTL_IO_TASK:
if (ctl_debug & CTL_DEBUG_CDB)
ctl_io_print(io);
ctl_enqueue_incoming(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
break;
default:
printf("ctl_queue: unknown I/O type %d\n", io->io_hdr.io_type);
return (EINVAL);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
return (CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE);
}
#ifdef CTL_IO_DELAY
static void
ctl_done_timer_wakeup(void *arg)
{
union ctl_io *io;
io = (union ctl_io *)arg;
ctl_done(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
#endif /* CTL_IO_DELAY */
void
ctl_serseq_done(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_lun *lun;
lun = (struct ctl_lun *)io->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
if (lun->be_lun == NULL ||
lun->be_lun->serseq == CTL_LUN_SERSEQ_OFF)
return;
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_SERSEQ_DONE;
ctl_check_blocked(lun);
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
}
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
void
ctl_done(union ctl_io *io)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
/*
* Enable this to catch duplicate completion issues.
*/
#if 0
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_ALREADY_DONE) {
printf("%s: type %d msg %d cdb %x iptl: "
"%u:%u:%u tag 0x%04x "
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
"flag %#x status %x\n",
__func__,
io->io_hdr.io_type,
io->io_hdr.msg_type,
io->scsiio.cdb[0],
io->io_hdr.nexus.initid,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port,
io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_lun,
(io->io_hdr.io_type ==
CTL_IO_TASK) ?
io->taskio.tag_num :
io->scsiio.tag_num,
io->io_hdr.flags,
io->io_hdr.status);
} else
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_ALREADY_DONE;
#endif
/*
* This is an internal copy of an I/O, and should not go through
* the normal done processing logic.
*/
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_INT_COPY)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
return;
#ifdef CTL_IO_DELAY
if (io->io_hdr.flags & CTL_FLAG_DELAY_DONE) {
struct ctl_lun *lun;
lun =(struct ctl_lun *)io->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
io->io_hdr.flags &= ~CTL_FLAG_DELAY_DONE;
} else {
struct ctl_lun *lun;
lun =(struct ctl_lun *)io->io_hdr.ctl_private[CTL_PRIV_LUN].ptr;
if ((lun != NULL)
&& (lun->delay_info.done_delay > 0)) {
callout_init(&io->io_hdr.delay_callout, /*mpsafe*/ 1);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
io->io_hdr.flags |= CTL_FLAG_DELAY_DONE;
callout_reset(&io->io_hdr.delay_callout,
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
lun->delay_info.done_delay * hz,
ctl_done_timer_wakeup, io);
if (lun->delay_info.done_type == CTL_DELAY_TYPE_ONESHOT)
lun->delay_info.done_delay = 0;
return;
}
}
#endif /* CTL_IO_DELAY */
ctl_enqueue_done(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
static void
ctl_work_thread(void *arg)
{
struct ctl_thread *thr = (struct ctl_thread *)arg;
struct ctl_softc *softc = thr->ctl_softc;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
union ctl_io *io;
int retval;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_work_thread starting\n"));
for (;;) {
retval = 0;
/*
* We handle the queues in this order:
* - ISC
* - done queue (to free up resources, unblock other commands)
* - RtR queue
* - incoming queue
*
* If those queues are empty, we break out of the loop and
* go to sleep.
*/
mtx_lock(&thr->queue_lock);
io = (union ctl_io *)STAILQ_FIRST(&thr->isc_queue);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io != NULL) {
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(&thr->isc_queue, links);
mtx_unlock(&thr->queue_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
ctl_handle_isc(io);
continue;
}
io = (union ctl_io *)STAILQ_FIRST(&thr->done_queue);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
if (io != NULL) {
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(&thr->done_queue, links);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
/* clear any blocked commands, call fe_done */
mtx_unlock(&thr->queue_lock);
retval = ctl_process_done(io);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
continue;
}
io = (union ctl_io *)STAILQ_FIRST(&thr->incoming_queue);
if (io != NULL) {
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(&thr->incoming_queue, links);
mtx_unlock(&thr->queue_lock);
if (io->io_hdr.io_type == CTL_IO_TASK)
ctl_run_task(io);
else
ctl_scsiio_precheck(softc, &io->scsiio);
continue;
}
io = (union ctl_io *)STAILQ_FIRST(&thr->rtr_queue);
if (io != NULL) {
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(&thr->rtr_queue, links);
mtx_unlock(&thr->queue_lock);
retval = ctl_scsiio(&io->scsiio);
if (retval != CTL_RETVAL_COMPLETE)
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_scsiio failed\n"));
continue;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/* Sleep until we have something to do. */
mtx_sleep(thr, &thr->queue_lock, PDROP | PRIBIO, "-", 0);
}
}
static void
ctl_lun_thread(void *arg)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = (struct ctl_softc *)arg;
struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun;
int retval;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_lun_thread starting\n"));
for (;;) {
retval = 0;
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
be_lun = STAILQ_FIRST(&softc->pending_lun_queue);
if (be_lun != NULL) {
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(&softc->pending_lun_queue, links);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
ctl_create_lun(be_lun);
continue;
}
/* Sleep until we have something to do. */
mtx_sleep(&softc->pending_lun_queue, &softc->ctl_lock,
PDROP | PRIBIO, "-", 0);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
}
static void
ctl_thresh_thread(void *arg)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = (struct ctl_softc *)arg;
struct ctl_lun *lun;
struct ctl_be_lun *be_lun;
struct scsi_da_rw_recovery_page *rwpage;
struct ctl_logical_block_provisioning_page *page;
const char *attr;
union ctl_ha_msg msg;
uint64_t thres, val;
int i, e, set;
CTL_DEBUG_PRINT(("ctl_thresh_thread starting\n"));
for (;;) {
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
STAILQ_FOREACH(lun, &softc->lun_list, links) {
be_lun = lun->be_lun;
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_DISABLED) ||
(lun->flags & CTL_LUN_OFFLINE) ||
lun->backend->lun_attr == NULL)
continue;
if ((lun->flags & CTL_LUN_PRIMARY_SC) == 0 &&
softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER)
continue;
rwpage = &lun->mode_pages.rw_er_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT];
if ((rwpage->byte8 & SMS_RWER_LBPERE) == 0)
continue;
e = 0;
page = &lun->mode_pages.lbp_page[CTL_PAGE_CURRENT];
for (i = 0; i < CTL_NUM_LBP_THRESH; i++) {
if ((page->descr[i].flags & SLBPPD_ENABLED) == 0)
continue;
thres = scsi_4btoul(page->descr[i].count);
thres <<= CTL_LBP_EXPONENT;
switch (page->descr[i].resource) {
case 0x01:
attr = "blocksavail";
break;
case 0x02:
attr = "blocksused";
break;
case 0xf1:
attr = "poolblocksavail";
break;
case 0xf2:
attr = "poolblocksused";
break;
default:
continue;
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock); // XXX
val = lun->backend->lun_attr(
lun->be_lun->be_lun, attr);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
if (val == UINT64_MAX)
continue;
if ((page->descr[i].flags & SLBPPD_ARMING_MASK)
== SLBPPD_ARMING_INC)
e = (val >= thres);
else
e = (val <= thres);
if (e)
break;
}
mtx_lock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (e) {
scsi_u64to8b((uint8_t *)&page->descr[i] -
(uint8_t *)page, lun->ua_tpt_info);
if (lun->lasttpt == 0 ||
time_uptime - lun->lasttpt >= CTL_LBP_UA_PERIOD) {
lun->lasttpt = time_uptime;
ctl_est_ua_all(lun, -1, CTL_UA_THIN_PROV_THRES);
set = 1;
} else
set = 0;
} else {
lun->lasttpt = 0;
ctl_clr_ua_all(lun, -1, CTL_UA_THIN_PROV_THRES);
set = -1;
}
mtx_unlock(&lun->lun_lock);
if (set != 0 &&
lun->ctl_softc->ha_mode == CTL_HA_MODE_XFER) {
/* Send msg to other side. */
bzero(&msg.ua, sizeof(msg.ua));
msg.hdr.msg_type = CTL_MSG_UA;
msg.hdr.nexus.initid = -1;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_port = -1;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_lun = lun->lun;
msg.hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun = lun->lun;
msg.ua.ua_all = 1;
msg.ua.ua_set = (set > 0);
msg.ua.ua_type = CTL_UA_THIN_PROV_THRES;
memcpy(msg.ua.ua_info, lun->ua_tpt_info, 8);
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock); // XXX
ctl_ha_msg_send(CTL_HA_CHAN_CTL, &msg,
sizeof(msg.ua), M_WAITOK);
mtx_lock(&softc->ctl_lock);
}
}
mtx_unlock(&softc->ctl_lock);
pause("-", CTL_LBP_PERIOD * hz);
}
}
static void
ctl_enqueue_incoming(union ctl_io *io)
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct ctl_thread *thr;
u_int idx;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
idx = (io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_port * 127 +
io->io_hdr.nexus.initid) % worker_threads;
thr = &softc->threads[idx];
mtx_lock(&thr->queue_lock);
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&thr->incoming_queue, &io->io_hdr, links);
mtx_unlock(&thr->queue_lock);
wakeup(thr);
}
static void
ctl_enqueue_rtr(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct ctl_thread *thr;
thr = &softc->threads[io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun % worker_threads];
mtx_lock(&thr->queue_lock);
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&thr->rtr_queue, &io->io_hdr, links);
mtx_unlock(&thr->queue_lock);
wakeup(thr);
}
static void
ctl_enqueue_done(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct ctl_thread *thr;
thr = &softc->threads[io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun % worker_threads];
mtx_lock(&thr->queue_lock);
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&thr->done_queue, &io->io_hdr, links);
mtx_unlock(&thr->queue_lock);
wakeup(thr);
}
static void
ctl_enqueue_isc(union ctl_io *io)
{
struct ctl_softc *softc = control_softc;
struct ctl_thread *thr;
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
thr = &softc->threads[io->io_hdr.nexus.targ_mapped_lun % worker_threads];
mtx_lock(&thr->queue_lock);
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&thr->isc_queue, &io->io_hdr, links);
mtx_unlock(&thr->queue_lock);
wakeup(thr);
Add the CAM Target Layer (CTL). CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI (who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. Some CTL features: - Disk and processor device emulation. - Tagged queueing - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) - Support for multiple ports - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores - Persistent reservation support - Mode sense/select support - Error injection support - High Availability support (1) - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. (1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully functional. ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing, character driver, and HA support are here. ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures. ctl_backend.c, ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API. ctl_backend_block.c, ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any concurrency. ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs. ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler functions defined for supported opcodes. ctl_debug.h: Debugging support. ctl_error.c, ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. ctl_frontend.c, ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. This frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in CTL are visible in CAM via this port. ctl_frontend_internal.c, ctl_frontend_internal.h: This is a frontend port written for Copan to do some system-specific tasks that required sending commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general, but can perhaps be repurposed. ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much more is needed for full HA support. See the comments in the header and the description of what is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more details. ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and the data structures needed for those ioctls. ctl_mem_pool.c, ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the internal frontend. ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. ctl_scsi_all.c, ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of command is followed by another type of command. ctl_util.c, ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB building functions. scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list. usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm. ctladm/Makefile, ctladm/ctladm.8, ctladm/ctladm.c, ctladm/ctladm.h, ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility. It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat. ctlstat/Makefile ctlstat/ctlstat.8, ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics for CTL. sys/conf/files: Add CTL files. sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl. sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB length field is now 2 bytes long. Add several mode page definitions for CTL. sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length. sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c, sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c, scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c, mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field. scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages that are in a more reasonable format for CTL. amd64/conf/GENERIC, i386/conf/GENERIC, ia64/conf/GENERIC, sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl. i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile cleanly on PAE. Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2012-01-12 00:34:33 +00:00
}
/*
* vim: ts=8
*/