reset device task request from the driver. If the drive fails to respond
with a signature FIS, the driver would previously get into an endless retry
loop, stalling all I/O to the drive and keeping user processes stranded.
Instead, fail the i/o and invalidate the device if the task management
command times out. This is controllable with the sysctl and tunable
hw.isci.fail_on_task_timeout
dev.isci.0.fail_on_task_timeout
The default for these is 1.
Reviewed by: jimharris
Obtained from: Netflix, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
by treating it as UDMA.
This fixes a problem introduced in r249933/r249939, where CAM sends
ATA_DSM_TRIM to SATA devices using ATA_PASSTHROUGH_16. scsi_ata_trim()
sets protocol as DMA (not UDMA) which is for multi-word DMA, even
though no such mode is selected for the device. isci(4) would fail
these commands which is the correct behavior but not consistent with
other HBAs, namely LSI's.
smh@ did some further testing on an LSI controller, which rejected
ATA_PASSTHROUGH_16 commands with mode=UDMA_OUT, even though only
a UDMA mode was selected on the device. So this precludes adding
any kind of mode detection in CAM to determine which mode to use on
a per-device basis.
Sponsored by: Intel
Discussed with: scottl, smh
Reported by: scottl
Tested by: scottl
MFC after: 3 days
Stop abusing xpt_periph in random plases that really have no periph related
to CCB, for example, bus scanning. NULL value is fine in such cases and it
is correctly logged in debug messages as "noperiph". If at some point we
need some real XPT periphs (alike to pmpX now), quite likely they will be
per-bus, and not a single global instance as xpt_periph now.
data buffer for a ccb that is unmapped.
This case is currently not possible, since the SCI framework only
requests these pointers for doing SCSI/ATA translation of non-
READ/WRITE commands. The panic is more to protect against the
unlikely future scenario where additional commands could be unmapped.
Sponsored by: Intel
every architecture's busdma_machdep.c. It is done by unifying the
bus_dmamap_load_buffer() routines so that they may be called from MI
code. The MD busdma is then given a chance to do any final processing
in the complete() callback.
The cam changes unify the bus_dmamap_load* handling in cam drivers.
The arm and mips implementations are updated to track virtual
addresses for sync(). Previously this was done in a type specific
way. Now it is done in a generic way by recording the list of
virtuals in the map.
Submitted by: jeff (sponsored by EMC/Isilon)
Reviewed by: kan (previous version), scottl,
mjacob (isp(4), no objections for target mode changes)
Discussed with: ian (arm changes)
Tested by: marius (sparc64), mips (jmallet), isci(4) on x86 (jharris),
amd64 (Fabian Keil <freebsd-listen@fabiankeil.de>)
to map, and technically this isn't allowed.
Functionally, it works OK (at least on x86) to call bus_dmamap_load with
a NULL data pointer and zero length, so this is primarily for correctness
and consistency with other drivers.
While here, remove check in isci_io_request_construct for nseg==0.
Previously, bus_dmamap_load would pass nseg==1, even for case where
buffer is NULL and length = 0, which allowed CAM_DIR_NONE CCBs
to get processed. This check is not correct though, and needed to be
removed both for the changes elsewhere in this patch, as well as jeff's
preliminary bus_dmamap_load_ccb patch (which uncovered all of this in
the first place).
MFC after: 3 days
While here, change ISCI_LED to ISCI_PHY since conceptually the hardware
ties the LEDs to a phy and the LEDs for a given phy cannot be controlled
independently.
Submitted by: Paul Maulberger <Paul.Maulberger at gmx.de> (with modifications)
Device nodes are in the format /dev/led/isci.busX.portY.locate.
Sponsored by: Intel
Requested by: Paul Maulberger <paul dot maulberger at gmx dot de>
MFC after: 1 week
(download microcode with offsets, save, and activate).
SATI translation layer was incorrectly using allocation length instead
of blocks, and was constructing the ATA command incorrectly.
Also change #define to specify that the 512 block size here is
specific for DOWNLOAD_MICROCODE, and does not relate to the device's
logical block size.
Submitted by: scottl (with small modifications)
MFC after: 3 days
This routine is intended only for commands such as INQUIRY where
the controller may fill out a smaller amount of data than allocated
by the host.
The end result of this bug was that isci(4) would report non-zero
resid for successful SCSI_UNMAP commands.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
This ensures that any ccbs which immediately start during the call to
xpt_release_devq see an accurate picture of the frozen_lun_mask.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
This addresses kernel panic observed when sending SCSI UNMAP
commands to SATA disks attached to isci(4).
1) Flesh out callback routines to allocate/free buffers needed for
translating SCSI UNMAP data to ATA DSM data.
2) Add controller-level pool for storing buffers previously allocated
for UNMAP translation, to lessen chance of no buffer available
under memory pressure.
3) Ensure driver properly handles case where buffer pool is empty
and contigmalloc returns NULL.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reported by: Maksim Yevmenkin <max at netflix dot com>
Discussed with: scottl
MFC after: 3 days
queued internally. This works around issue in the isci HAL where it cannot
accept new I/O to a device after a resetting->ready state transition until
the completion context has unwound.
This issue was found by submitting non-tagged CCBs through pass(4) interface
to a SATA disk with an extremely small timeout value (5ms). This would trigger
internal resets with I/O in the isci(4) internal queues.
The small timeout value had not been intentional (and original reporter has
since changed his test to use 5sec instead), but it did uncover this corner
case that would result in a hung disk.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reported and tested by: Ravi Pokala <rpokala at panasas dot com>
Reviewed by: scottl (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
result in INQUIRY VPD 0x81 to SATA devices to return only 63 bytes of data
instead of 64 during SCSI/ATA translation.
Sponsored by: Intel
Approved by: scottl
MFC after: 1 week
problem where userspace apps such as smartctl fail due to CAM_REQUEUE_REQ
status getting returned when tagged commands are outstanding when smartctl
sends its I/O using the pass(4) interface.
Sponsored by: Intel
Found and tested by: Ravi Pokala <rpokala at panasas dot com>
Reviewed by: scottl
Approved by: scottl
MFC after: 1 week
sys/dev/isci/isci_task_request.c:198:7: error: case value not in enumerated type 'SCI_TASK_STATUS' (aka 'enum _SCI_TASK_STATUS') [-Werror,-Wswitch]
case SCI_FAILURE_TIMEOUT:
^
This is because the switch is done on a SCI_TASK_STATUS enum type, but
the SCI_FAILURE_TIMEOUT value belongs to SCI_STATUS instead.
Because the list of SCI_TASK_STATUS values cannot be modified at this
time, use the simplest way to get rid of this warning, which is to cast
the switch argument to int. No functional change.
Reviewed by: jimharris
MFC after: 3 days
until domain discovery is complete. This fixes an isci(4) bug on FreeBSD 7.x
where devices weren't always appearing after boot without an explicit rescan.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reported and tested by: <rpokala at panasas dot com>
Reviewed by: scottl
Approved by: scottl
struct ccb_pathinq from sys/cam/cam_ccb.h wasn't added to stable/7 at all
and didn't appear in stable/8 until svn R195534. Since __FreeBSD_version
did not get bumped until svn R195634, assume that maxio is valid at 800102
or higher.
Obtained from: Yahoo! Inc.
MFC after: 0 days
with clang. Also fix a number of warnings uncovered when building with
clang around some implicit enum conversions.
Sponsored by: Intel
Approved by: scottl
The isci driver is for the integrated SAS controller in the Intel C600
(Patsburg) chipset. Source files in sys/dev/isci directory are
FreeBSD-specific, and sys/dev/isci/scil subdirectory contains
an OS-agnostic library (SCIL) published by Intel to control the SAS
controller. This library is used primarily as-is in this driver, with
some post-processing to better integrate into the kernel build
environment.
isci.4 and a README in the sys/dev/isci directory contain a few
additional details.
This driver is only built for amd64 and i386 targets.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: scottl
Approved by: scottl