lun address modifier of sorts. Only an HP XP-512 seems to have cared.
Fix a few misplaced pointers for the new fabric goop, which has been
demonstrated to work on newer Brocades and McData switches now.
Put in commented out code which would run GFF_ID if the QLogic f/w
allowed it.
Don't whine about not being able to find a handle for a command if it
was a command aborted (by us).
Grumble. I've seen better documented architectures out of Redmond.
Redo fabric evaluation to not use GET ALL NEXT (GA_NXT). Switches seem
to be trying to wriggle out of supporting this well. Instead, use
GID_FT to get a list of Port IDs and then use GPN_ID/GNN_ID to find the
port and node wwn. This should make working on fabrics a bit cleaner and
more stable.
This also caused some cleanup of SNS subcommand canonicalization so that
we can actually check for FS_ACC and FS_RJT, and if we get an FS_RJT,
print out the reason and explanation codes.
We'll keep the old GA_NXT method around if people want to uncomment a
controlling definition in ispvar.h.
This also had us clean up ISPASYNC_FABRICDEV to use a local lportdb argument
and to have the caller explicitly say that a device is at the end of the
fabric list.
MFC after: 1 week
most cases NULL is passed, but in some cases such as network driver locks
(which use the MTX_NETWORK_LOCK macro) and UMA zone locks, a name is used.
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
stuff was right, but the busdma stuff was massively not right.
Didn't really test on ia64 or i386- don't have the former h/w and my
FreeBSD-current disk is unwell right now. Hope that this is okay.
MFC after: 1 week
soon because it's just getting harder and harder to find switches
that correctly implement the GET ALL NEXT subcommands for the SNS
protocol.
Latch up result out pointer and set a busy flag when we're looking
at the response queue. This allows for a cleaner way to make sure
we don't get multiple CPUs trying to read the same response queue
entries.
Change how isp_handle_other_response returns values (clarity).
Make PORT UNAVAILABLE the same as PORT LOGOUT (force a LIP).
Do some formatting changes.
MFC after: 0 days
it worked- but I ran into a case with a 2204 where commands were being lost
right and left. Best be safe.
For target mode, or things called if we call isp_handle_other response- note
that we might have dropped locks by changing the output pointer so we bail
from the loop. It's the responsibility of the entity dropping the lock to
make sure that we let the f/w know we've read thus far into the response
queue (else we begin processing the same entries again- blech!).
MFC after: 1 day
OUT status. We are, apparently, required to force the f/w to log back in
if we want to try and talk to that disk again. This means either issuing
a LOGIN LOCAL LOOP PORT mailbox command, or by issuing a LIP. I've elected
to issue a LIP because this has a better chance of waking up the disk which
clearly just crashed and burned.
These should not occur at all. If they do, they should be darned rare.
MFC after: 1 week
If you want QLogic to look at a potential f/w problem for FC cards, you really
have to provide them info in the format they expect. This involves dumping
a lot of hardware registers (> 300 16 bit registers) and a lot of SRAM
(> 128KB minimum). Thus all of this code is #ifdef protected which will
become an option so that the memory allocation of where to dump the crash
image is pretty expensive. It's worth it if you have a reproducible problem
because they have some tools that can tell them, given the f/w version,
the precise state of everything.
MFC after: 1 week
disable MWI on 2300
based on function code, set an 'isp_port' for the 2312- it's a
separate instance, but the NVRAM is shared, and the second port's
NVRAM is at offset 256.
+ Enable RIO operation for LVD SCSI cards. This makes a *big* difference
as even under reasonable load we get batched completions of about 30
commands at a time on, say, an ISP1080.
+ Do 'continuation' mailbox commands- this allows us to specify a work
area within the softc and 'continue' repeated mailbox commands. This is
more or less on an ad hoc basis and is currently only used for firmware
loading (which f/w now loads substantially faster becuase the calling
thread is only woken when all the f/w words are loaded- not for each
one of the 40000 f/w words that gets loaded).
+ If we're about to return from isp_intr with a 'bogus interrupt' indication,
and we're not a 23XX card, check to see whether the semaphore register is
currently *2* (not *1* as it should be) and whether there's an async completion
sitting in outgoing mailbox0. This seems to capture cases of lost fast posting
and RIO interrupts that the 12160 && 1080 have been known to pump out under
extreme load (extreme, as in > 250 active commands).
+ FC_SCRATCH_ACQUIRE/FC_SCRATCH_RELEASE macros.
+ Endian correct swizzle/unswizzle of an ATIO2 that has a WWPN in it.
MFC after: 1 week
firmware to delay completion of commands so that it can attempt to batch
a bunch of completions at once- either returning 16 bit handles in mailbox
registers, or in a resposne queue entry that has a whole wad of 16 bit handles.
Distinguish between 2300 and 2312 chipsets- if only because the revisions
on the chips have different meanings.
Add more instrumentation plus ISP_GET_STATS and ISP_CLR_STATS ioctls.
Run up the maximum number of response queue entities we'll look at
per interrupt.
If we haven't set HBA role yet, always return success from isp_fc_runstate.
MFC after: 2 weeks
a GetAllNext response. Otherwise, we won't unswizzle
it correctly. This was found on linux/PPC.
This mandated creating another inline: isp_get_gan_response.
the response queue. Instead of the ad hoc ISP_SWIZZLE_REQUEST, we now have
a complete set of inline functions in isp_inline.h. Each platform is
responsible for providing just one of a set of ISP_IOX_{GET,PUT}{8,16,32}
macros.
The reason this needs to be done is that we need to have a single set of
functions that will work correctly on multiple architectures for both little
and big endian machines. It also needs to work correctly in the case that
we have the request or response queues in memory that has to be treated
specially (e.g., have ddi_dma_sync called on it for Solaris after we update
it or before we read from it). It also has to handle the SBus cards (for
platforms that have them) which, while on a Big Endian machine, do *not*
require *most* of the request/response queue entry fields to be swizzled
or unswizzled.
One thing that falls out of this is that we no longer build requests in the
request queue itself. Instead, we build the request locally (e.g., on the
stack) and then as part of the swizzling operation, copy it to the request
queue entry we've allocated. I thought long and hard about whether this was
too expensive a change to make as it in a lot of cases requires an extra
copy. On balance, the flexbility is worth it. With any luck, the entry that
we build locally stays in a processor writeback cache (after all, it's only
64 bytes) so that the cost of actually flushing it to the memory area that is
the shared queue with the PCI device is not all that expensive. We may examine
this again and try to get clever in the future to try and avoid copies.
Another change that falls out of this is that MEMORYBARRIER should be taken
a lot more seriously. The macro ISP_ADD_REQUEST does a MEMORYBARRIER on the
entry being added. But there had been many other places this had been missing.
It's now very important that it be done.
Additional changes:
Fix a longstanding buglet of sorts. When we get an entry via isp_getrqentry,
the iptr value that gets returned is the value we intend to eventually plug
into the ISP registers as the entry *one past* the last one we've written-
*not* the current entry we're updating. All along we've been calling sync
functions on the wrong index value. Argh. The 'fix' here is to rename all
'iptr' variables as 'nxti' to remember that this is the 'next' pointer-
not the current pointer.
Devote a single bit to mboxbsy- and set aside bits for output mbox registers
that we need to pick up- we can have at least one command which does not
have any defined output registers (MBOX_EXECUTE_FIRMWARE).
MFC after: 2 weeks
If we get a completion status of RQCS_QUEUE_FULL, it means
that the internal queues are full. Other QLogic boards set
the QFULL SCSI status. But *nooooooooooo*, not the 2300.
MFC after: 1 day
appropriate cache flush that provides MEMORY_BARRIER in between handoffs
between host && RISC processor for the shared memory request/response
queues.
Submitted by: dfr@nlsystems.com
to see if there's an interrupt (avoids PCI parity errors
which can occur on the 2312 if you access some registers
from the host at the same time the RISC on the 2312 is
C accessing them).
MFC after: 1 day
per-command component that we *don't* try and pass thru CAM. CAM just
is too risky and too much of a pain- structures get copied, but not
all info of interest can be considered safely transported thru all
consumers (including user space) from the incoming ATIO to the outgoing
CTIO- it's just much safer to have a buddy structure, identified by the
command's tag which *does* make it thru safely.
Pay attention to link speed and report 200MB/s xfer speed for a
23XX card in 2GPs mode.
MFC after: 1 week
once so there isn't a window with the ones for the 23XX cards being wrong.
When being verbose, print out some more FC NVRAM values (like framesize).
MFC after: 1 week
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.
Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)
Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org
X-MFC after: ha ha ha ha
SIM (as is true for the 1280 and the 12160), then I have to have separate
flags && status for *both* busses. *Whap*.
Implement condition variables for coordination with some target mode
events. It's nice to use these and not panic in obscure little places
in the kernel like 'propagate_priority' just because we went to sleep
holding a mutex, or some other absurd thing.
Remove some bogus ISP_UNLOCK calls. *Whap*.
No longer require that somebody do a lun enable on the wildcard device
to enable target mode. They are, in fact, orthogonal. A wildcard open
is a statement that somebody upstream is willing to accept commands which
are otherwise unrouteable. Now, for QLogic regular SCSI target mode, this
won't matter for a damn because we'll never see ATIOs for luns we haven't
enabled (are listening for, if you will). But for SCCLUN fibre channel
SCSI, we get all kinds of ATIOs. We can either reflect them back here
with minimal info (which is isp_target.c:isp_endcmd() is for), or the
wildcard device (nominally targbh) can handle them.
Do further checking against firmware attributes to see whether we can,
in fact, support target mode in Fibre Channel. For now, require SCCLUN
f/w to supoprt FC target mode.
This is an awful lot of change, but target mode *still* isn't quite right.
MFC after: 4 weeks
applies to. Do more bus # foo things.
Acknowledge Immediate Notifies right away prior to throwing events upstream
(where they're currently being ignored, *groan*)
Capture ASYNC_LIP_F8 as with ASYNC_LIP_OCCURRED. Don't percolate them
upstream as if they were BUS RESETS- they're not.
and cv_wait for mailbox commands to complete if we start them from
here.
Fix residuals for target mode such that we only check the residual and
set it in the CTIO if this is the last CTIO (when we're sending status).
MFC after: 4 weeks
SIM (as is true for the 1280 and the 12160), then I have to have separate
flags && status for *both* busses. *Whap*.
Implement condition variables for coordination with some target mode
events. It's nice to use these and not panic in obscure little places
in the kernel like 'propagate_priority' just because we went to sleep
holding a mutex, or some other absurd thing.
MFC after: 4 weeks
luns) firmware for the Fibre Channel cards.
We used to assume that if we didn't download firmware, we couldn't know
what the firmware capability with respect to SCCLUNs is- and it's important
because the lun field changes in the request queue entry based upon which
firmware it is.
At any rate, we *do* get back firmware attributes in mailbox register 6
when we do ABOUT FIRMWARE for all 2200/2300 cards- and for 2100 cards
with at least 1.17.0 firmware. So- we now assume non-SCCLUN behaviour
for 2100 cards with firmware < 1.17.0- and we check the firmware attributes
for other cards (loaded firmware or not).
This also allows us to get rid of the crappy test of isp_maxluns > 16-
we simply can check firmware attributes for SCCLUN behaviour.
This required an 'oops' fix to the outgoing mailbox count field for
ABOUT FIRMWARE for FC cards.
Also- while here, hardwire firmware revisions for loaded code for SBus
cards. Apparently the 1.35 or 1.37 f/w we've been loading into isp1000
just doesn't report firmware revisions out to mailbox regs 1, 2 and 3
like everyone else. Grumble. Not that this fix hardly matters for FreeBSD.
MFC after: 4 weeks
some reworking (and consequent cleanup) of the interrupt service code.
Also begin to start a cleanup of target mode support that will (eventually)
not require more inforamtion routed with the ATIO to come back with the
CTIO other than tag.
MFC after: 4 weeks
that do not have valid NVRAM. In particular, we were leaving
a retry count set (to retry selection timeouts) when thats
not really what we want. Do some constant string additions
so that LOGDEBUG0 info is useful across all cards.
MFC after: 2 weeks
either what's in NVRAM or what the safe defaults would be if we lack NVRAM.
Then we rename cur_XXXX to actv_XXXX (these are the currently active settings)
and the dev_XXX settings to goal_XXXX (these are the settings which we want
cur_XXXX to converge to).
This probably isn't entirely final as yet- but it's a lot closer to now
being what it should be, including allowing camcontrol to actually set
specific settings.
either what's in NVRAM or what the safe defaults would be if we lack NVRAM.
Then we rename cur_XXXX to actv_XXXX (these are the currently active settings)
and the dev_XXX settings to goal_XXXX (these are the settings which we want
cur_XXXX to converge to).
Roll core minor.
either what's in NVRAM or what the safe defaults would be if we lack NVRAM.
Then we rename cur_XXXX to actv_XXXX (these are the currently active settings)
and the dev_XXX settings to goal_XXXX (these are the settings which we want
cur_XXXX to converge to).
Correctly reintroduce loop_seen_once semantics- that is, if we've never
seen good link, start bouncing commands with CAM_SEL_TIMEOUT. But we
have to be careful to have let ourselves try (in isp_kthread) to check
for loop up at least once.
PR: 28992
MFC after: 1 week
We originally had it such that if the connection topology was FL-loop
(public loop), we never looked at any local loop addresses. The reason
for not doing that was fear or concern that we'd see the same local
loop disks reflected from the name server and we'd attach them twice.
However, when I recently hooked up a JBOD and a system to an ANCOR SA-8
switch, the disks did *not* show up on the fabric. So at least the
ANCOR is screening those disks from appearing on the fabric. Now, it's
possible this is a 'feature' of the ANCOR. When I get a chance, I'll
check the Brocade (it's hard to do this on a low budget).
In any case, if they *do* also show up on the fabric, we should
simply elect to not log into them because we already have an
entry for the local loop. There is relatively unexercised code
just for this case.
MFC after: 2 weeks
For fibre channel, start going for the gusto and using AC_FOUND_DEVICE
and AC_LOST_DEVICE calls to xpt_async when devices appear and disappear
as the loop or fabric changes.
ISPASYNC_FW_CRASH is the async event code where the platform layer
deals with a firmware crash.
some of the RIO (reduced interrupt operation) stuff. Add 64 bit
data list (DSD type 1) and arbitrary data list (DSD type 2)
data structure defines.
Add macros that parameterize usage of the Request/Response in/out
queue pointers. When we finish 2300 support, different registers
will be accessed for the 2300.
part of the PCI block for the 2300- not software convention usage
of the mailbox registers- so we macrosize in/out pointer usage.
Only report that a LIP destroyed commands if it actually destroyed
commands. Get the chan/tgt/lun order correct. Fix a longstanding
stupid bug that caused us to try and issue a command with a tag on
Channel B because we were checking the tagged capability for the
target against Channel A.
A firmware crash is now vectored out to platform specific code
as an async event.
Some minor formatting tweaks.
554: passing arg 4 of `resource_string_value' from incompatible pointer type
576: passing arg 4 of `resource_string_value' from incompatible pointer type
593: passing arg 4 of `resource_string_value' from incompatible pointer type
commands that complete (with no apparent error) after
we receive a LIP. This has been observed mostly on
Local Loop topologies. To be safe, let's just mark
all active commands as dead if we get a LIP and we're
on a private or public loop.
MFC after: 4 weeks
----
Make a device for each ISP- really usable only with devfs and add an ioctl
entry point (this can be used to (re)set debug levels, reset the HBA,
rescan the fabric, issue lips, etc).
----
Add in a kernel thread for Fibre Channel cards. The purpose of this
thread is to be woken up to clean up after Fibre Channel events
block things. Basically, any FC event that casts doubt on the
location or identify of FC devices blocks the queues. When, and
if, we get the PORT DATABASE CHANGED or NAME SERVER DATABASE CHANGED
async event, we activate the kthread which will then, in full thread
context, re-evaluate the local loop and/or the fabric. When it's
satisfied that things are stable, it can then release the blocked
queues and let commands flow again.
The prior mechanism was a lazy evaluation. That is, the next command
to come down the pipe after change events would pay the full price
for re-evaluation. And if this was done off of a softcall, it really
could hang up the system.
These changes brings the FreeBSD port more in line with the Solaris,
Linux and NetBSD ports. It also, more importantly, gets us being
more proactive about topology changes which could then be reflected
upwards to CAM so that the periph driver can be informed sooner
rather than later when things arrive or depart.
---
Add in the (correct) usage of locking macros- we now have lock transition
macros which allow us to transition from holding the CAM lock (Giant)
and grabbing the softc lock and vice versa. Switch over to having this
HBA do real locking. Some folks claim this won't be a win. They're right.
But you have to start somewhere, and this will begin to teach us how
to DTRT for HBAs, etc.
--
Start putting in prototype 2300 support. Add back in LIP
and Loop Reset as async events that each platform will handle.
Add in another int_bogus instrumentation point.
Do some more substantial target mode cleanups.
MFC after: 8 weeks
overflow the request queue. The reason we want to do this is that we
now push out completed CTIOs as we complete them- this gets the QLogic
working on them quicker. So we need to know whether we can put the entire
burrito out before we start.
We now support conjoint status with data for the last CTIO for both Fibre
Channel and SCSI. Leave the old code in place in case we need to go back
(minor 3 line ifdef).
Ultra-ultra important- *don't* set rq->req_seg_count for non-data
target mode requests in isp_pci_dmasetup. D'oh- this is actually
the tag value area for a CTIO. What *was* I thinking? Boy howdy
does both aic7xxx and sym get awfully unhappy when on reconnect
you give them a constant '1' for a tag value.
function- we did it a bit cleaner. We only use this if a CTIO completes with
!CT_OK state. We now have managed to get away without having to poke around
and trying to find the original ATIO- the csio we're using has the tag_id
and lun values with it which is mostly what we need when we do the putback.
Make sure we correctly propagate AT_TQAE->CT_TQAE for tags. Make sure
we call ISP_DMAFREE only if we had DATA to move.
tag is active for an ATIO, and say that you want to reconnect with
a tag value in a CTIO have *never* been exercised until now. This lossage
derived from Solaris code where this stuff originally came from that is
about 7 years old. Amazing.
We now bundle the incoming tag (legal values are 0..256) as the low
16 bits of the ccb_accept_tio's at_tagid while we put the firmware
handle for this ATIO in the top 16 bits- define some macros to make
this cleaner.
Complete some Ansification.
Redo establishment of default SCSI parameters whether or not
we've been compiled for target mode. Unfortunately, the Qlogic
f/w is confused so that if we set all targets to be 'safe' (i.e.,
narrow/async), it will also then report narrow, async if we're
contacted in target mode from that target (acting in initiator
role). D'oh!
Fix ISPCTL_TOGGLE_TMODE to correctly enable the right channel for
dual channel cards. Add some more opcodes. Fix a stupid NULL
pointer bug.
I was hanging after sending a xfer CTIO and a status CTIO for a non-discon
INQUIRY- the xfer CTIO was returned as completed OK, but the status CTIO
was dropped on the floor. All the fields looked good. I don't know why
it got dropped. But allowing status to go back with data xfer seemed to
work. I also noticed that with a non-disconnecting command that the
firmware handle in the ATIO is zero- this leads me to believe that the
f/w really can only handle one CTIO at a time in the discon case, and
it had no idea what to do with the second (status) CTIO.
CAM_SEND_STATUS. Set a timeout of 2 seconds per CTIO. Make sure
that the 'real' tag value is being checked against- not the
one that also carries the firmware handle.
the target mode code or outer layers.
Increase cd_tagval to be 32 bits since it will have to now carry 16
bits of parallel SCSI ATIO handle as well as a normal tag (if any).
Solaris (which, for reasons unknown to me, chokes on u_int16_t
as a typedef of unsigned short if used in a transitional (mixed K&R
and ANSI) way), we'll go the extra mile and fully ANSIfy things.
This is a pretty invasive change, but there are three good
reasons to do this:
1. We'll never have > 16 bits of handle.
2. We can (eventually) enable the RIO (Reduced Interrupt Operation)
bits which return multiple completing 16 bit handles in mailbox
registers.
3. The !)$*)$*~)@$*~)$* Qlogic target mode for parallel SCSI spec
changed such that at_reserved (which was 32 bits) was split into
two pieces- and one of which was a 16 bit handle id that functions
like the at_rxid for Fibre Channel (a tag for the f/w to correlate
CTIOs with a particular command). Since we had to muck with that
and this changed the whole handler architecture, we might as well...
Propagate new at_handle on through int ct_fwhandle. Follow
implications of changing to 16 bit handles.
These above changes at least get Qlogic 1040 cards working in target
mode again. 1080/12160 cards don't work yet.
In isp.c:
Prepare for doing all loop management in outer layers.
for selecting unit). Instead, use the resource hints mechanism.
One unfortunate situation here is that there is no resource_quad_value
function- which is what I needed for WWN boot time replacement. Worse-
you can't store the hint as just plain
hint.isp.0.nodewwn="0x50000000aaaa0001"
because this gets interpreted as an int- incorrectly because it can't
be converted to an int. I can't even get this as a string. To work
around this particular case for nodewwn && portwwn setting, this
rather grotesque form will be used:
hint.isp.0.nodewwn="w50000000aaaa0001"
hint.isp.0.portwwn="w50000000aaaa0002"
At the same time, if we have no hinted WWN, set the default WWN (which, btw,
gets overridden if the card has valid NVRAM, which is usual) to
0x400000007F000009ull (which translates to NAA == IPv4, 127.0.0.9).
Eliminate more printf's and replace them either with device_printf or
isp_prt calls.
ones where we have a CAM path) and replacing them with calls to isp_prt.,
Eliminate isp_unit references- we no longer have an isp_unit- we now
have an isp_dev that device_get_unit can work with.
for the ICB firmware options meant- *I* had taken it to
mean that if you set it, Node Name would be ignored and
derived from Port Name. Actually, it meant the opposite.
As a consequence- change ICBOPT_USE_PORTNAME to the
define ICBOPT_BOTH_WWNS- makes more sense.
Fix wrong input bitmap for MBOX_DUMP_RAM command. Call
ISP_DUMPREGS if we get a f/w crash. Add ISPCTL_RUN_MBOXCMD
control command (so outer layers can run a mailbox command
directly) and add a ISPASYNC_UNHANDLED_RESPONSE hook so
outer layers can understand response queue entries we
might not know about.
isp_iid_set/isp_iid for fibre channel- this is because we now
fake a port database entry for ourselves. Add the additional loop
states between LOOP_PDB_RCVD and LOOP_READY.
Change and comment on a wad of Fibre Channel isp_control functions.
Change and comment on some of the ISPASYNC Fibre Channel events.
the unit number doesn't get reused.
Make sure that if we've compiled for ISP_TARGET_MODE we set the
default role to be ISP_ROLE_INITIATOR|ISP_ROLE_TARGET.
Do some misc other cleanups.
and depending on role, make sure link is up, scan the fabric (if we're
connected to a fabric), scan the local loop (if appropriate), merge
the results into the local port database then, check once again
to make sure we have f/w at FW_READY state and the the loopstate
is LOOP_READY.
Comment out usage of ISP_SMPLOCK- I have my doubts that this works sanely
as yet because CAM itself still needs Giant. I *was* dropping my lock
and grabbing Giant when doing the upcall for completion, but this is all
seems ridiculous until CAM is fixed.
if we're ISP_ROLE_NONE. Change ISPASYNC_LOGGED_INOUT to ISPASYNC_PROMENADE.
Make sure we note if something is a fabric device.
Target mode:
Finally fix (to a first approximation) SCSI Target Mode again- we needed
to correctly check against CAM_TARGET_WILDCARD and CAM_LUN_WILDCARD
so that targbh won't confuse us. Comment out the drainqueue stuff for
now. Use isp_fc_runstate instead if isp_control/ISPCTL_FCLINK_TEST.
Remove ISP2100_FABRIC defines- we always handle fabric now. Insert
isp_getmap helper function (for getting Loop Position map). Make
sure we (for our own benefit) mark req_state_flags with RQSF_GOT_SENSE
for Fibre Channel if we got sense data- the !*$)!*$)~*$)*$ Qlogic
f/w doesn't do so. Add ISPCTL_SCAN_FABRIC, ISPCTL_SCAN_LOOP, ISPCTL_SEND_LIP,
and ISPCTL_GET_POSMAP isp_control functions. Correctly send async notifications
upstream for changes in the name server, changes in the port database, and
f/w crashes. Correctly set topology when we get a ASYNC_PTPMODE event.
Major stuff:
Quite massively redo how we handle Loop events- we've now added several
intermediate states between LOOP_PDB_RCVD and LOOP_READY. This allows us
a lot finer control about how we scan fabric, whether we go further
than scanning fabric, how we look at the local loop, and whether we
merge entries at the level or not. This is the next to last step for
moving managing loop state out of the core module entirely (whereupon
loop && fabric events will simply freeze the command queue and a thread
will run to figure out what's changed and *it* will re-enable the queu).
This fine amount of control also gets us closer to having an external
policy engine decide which fabric devices we really want to log into.
mtx_enter(lock, type) becomes:
mtx_lock(lock) for sleep locks (MTX_DEF-initialized locks)
mtx_lock_spin(lock) for spin locks (MTX_SPIN-initialized)
similarily, for releasing a lock, we now have:
mtx_unlock(lock) for MTX_DEF and mtx_unlock_spin(lock) for MTX_SPIN.
We change the caller interface for the two different types of locks
because the semantics are entirely different for each case, and this
makes it explicitly clear and, at the same time, it rids us of the
extra `type' argument.
The enter->lock and exit->unlock change has been made with the idea
that we're "locking data" and not "entering locked code" in mind.
Further, remove all additional "flags" previously passed to the
lock acquire/release routines with the exception of two:
MTX_QUIET and MTX_NOSWITCH
The functionality of these flags is preserved and they can be passed
to the lock/unlock routines by calling the corresponding wrappers:
mtx_{lock, unlock}_flags(lock, flag(s)) and
mtx_{lock, unlock}_spin_flags(lock, flag(s)) for MTX_DEF and MTX_SPIN
locks, respectively.
Re-inline some lock acq/rel code; in the sleep lock case, we only
inline the _obtain_lock()s in order to ensure that the inlined code
fits into a cache line. In the spin lock case, we inline recursion and
actually only perform a function call if we need to spin. This change
has been made with the idea that we generally tend to avoid spin locks
and that also the spin locks that we do have and are heavily used
(i.e. sched_lock) do recurse, and therefore in an effort to reduce
function call overhead for some architectures (such as alpha), we
inline recursion for this case.
Create a new malloc type for the witness code and retire from using
the M_DEV type. The new type is called M_WITNESS and is only declared
if WITNESS is enabled.
Begin cleaning up some machdep/mutex.h code - specifically updated the
"optimized" inlined code in alpha/mutex.h and wrote MTX_LOCK_SPIN
and MTX_UNLOCK_SPIN asm macros for the i386/mutex.h as we presently
need those.
Finally, caught up to the interface changes in all sys code.
Contributors: jake, jhb, jasone (in no particular order)
(so we can see rapidly whether something was a fabric device but is
now gone).
Add a tag which says what role this adapter should take. It can take
on the value of None, Target, Initiator or Both. None is useful for
warm failover purposes. Remove the ISP_CFG_NOINIT silliness since
a role of "None" does this.
Add a isp_lastmbxcmd tag to store the opcode for the last mailbox
command used.
Module) and FBM (Fibre Buffer Modules). Also remember to clear the
semaphore registers. Tell the RISC processor to not halt on FPM
parity errors.
Throw out the ISP_CFG_NOINIT silliness and instead go to the use of
adapter 'roles' to see whether one completes initialization or not
(mostly for Fibre Channel). The ultimate intent, btw, of all of this
is to have a warm standby adapter for failover reasons. Because
we do roles now, setting of Target Capable Class 3 service parameters
in the ICB for the 2x00 cards reflects from role. Also, in isp_start,
if we're not supporting an initiator role, we bounce outgoing commands
with a Selection Timeout error. Also clean out the TOGGLE_TMODE
goop for FC- there is no toggling of target mode like there is
for parallel SCSI cards.
Do more cleanup with respect to using target ids 0..125 in F-port
topologies. Also keep track of things which *were* fabric devices
so that when you rescan the fabric you can notify the outer layers
when fabric devices go away.
Only force a LOGOUT for fabric devices if they're still logged in
(i.e., you cat their Port Database entry. Clean up the Get All Next
scanning.
Finally, use a new tag in the softc to store the opcode for the
last mailbox command used so we can report which opcode timed
out.
that require us to register our FC4 types of interest. Allow ourselves, in
F-port topologies, to start logging in fabric devices in the target 0..125
range. Change ISPASYNC_PDB_CHANGED (misnamed) to ISPASYNC_LOGGED_INOUT.
Fix (*SMACK*) again some default WWN stuff. This is *really* hard to get
right across all the range of platforms.
WWNs correctly (Again!) - this time for the case that we're not going
to fully init the adapter if isp_init is called (with ISP_CFG_NOINIT
set in options). The pupose for this is to bring the adapter up to
almost ready to go, get info out of NVRAM, but to not start it up- leaving
it until later to actually start things up if wanted (and possibly with
different roles selected).
Add a test against isp->isp_osinfo.islocked prior to trying to see
whether --isp->isp_osinfo.islocked is zero to cause us to unlock
(non-SMPLOCK case).
(specifically, how many entries we've looked at so far). Maintain
interrupt instrumentation. Use USEC_SLEEP instead of USEC_DELAY in
a number of places (this allows us to drop locks and sleep instead
of spin). Track changes to configuration options for topology preference.
Fix botched order of printout for Channel, Target, Lun.
compile time will build in mutex locks, otherwise the old locking (splcam/splx
with a recursion counter) will be compiled in.
We still depend on config_intr_hook to tell us when it's okay to call
msleep instead of polling. It'd be real nice if we could do this early
enough to not hang up a machine struggling with a bad Fibre Channel loop,
but that's still to come.
the drivers.
* Remove legacy inx/outx support from chipset and replace with macros
which call busspace.
* Rework pci config accesses to route through the pcib device instead of
calling a MD function directly.
With these changes it is possible to cleanly support machines which have
more than one independantly numbered PCI busses. As a bonus, the new
busspace implementation should be measurably faster than the old one.
changes is that there's now a Solaris port of this driver, so some things
in the core version had to change (not much, but some).
In order, from the top.....:
A lot of error strings are gathered in one place at the head of the file.
This caused me to rewrite them to look consistent (with respect to
things like 'Port 0x%' and 'Target %d' and 'Loop ID 0x%x'.
The major mailbox function, isp_mboxcmd, now takes a third argument,
which is a mask that selectively says whether mailbox command failures
will be logged. This will substantially reduce a lot of spurious noise
from the driver.
At the first run through isp_reset we used to try and get the current
running firmware's revision by issuing a mailbox command. This would
invariably fail on alpha's with anything but a Qlogic 1040 since SRM
doesn't *start* the f/w on these cards. Instead, we now see whether we're
sitting ROM state before trying to get a running BIOS loaded f/w version.
All CFGPRINTF/PRINTF/IDPRINTF macros have been replaced with calls to
isp_prt. There are seperate print levels that can be independently
set (see ispvar.h), which include debugging, etc.
All SYS_DELAY macros are now USEC_DELAY macros. RQUEST_QUEUE_LEN and
RESULT_QUEUE_LEN now take ispsoftc as a parameter- the Fibre Channel
cards and the Ultra2/Ultra3 cards can have 16 bit request queue entry
indices, so we can make a 1024 entry index for them instead of the
256 entries we've had until now.
A major change it to fix isp_fclink_test to actually only wait the
delay of time specified in the microsecond argument being passed.
The problem has always been that a call to isp_mboxcmd to get he
current firmware state takes an unknown (sometimes long) amount of
time- this is if the firmware is busy doing PLOGIs while we ask
it what's up. So, up until now, the usdelay argument has been
a joke. The net effect has been that if you boot without being plugged
into a good loop or into a switch, you hang. Massively annonying, and
hard to fix because the actual time delta was impossible to know
from just guessing. Now, using the new GET_NANOTIME macros, a precise
and measured amount of USEC_DELAY calls are done so that only the
specified usecdelay is allowed to pass. This means that if the initial
startup of the firmware if followed by a call from isp_freebsd.c:isp_attach
to isp_control(isp, ISP_FCLINK_TEST, &tdelay) where tdelay is 2 * 1000000,
no more than two seconds will actually elapse before we leave concluding
that the cable is unhooked. Jeez. About time....
Change the ispscsicmd entry point to isp_start, and the XS_CMD_DONE
macro to a call to the platform supplied isp_done (sane naming).
Limit our size of request queue completions we'll look at at interrupt
time. Since we've increased the size of the Request Queue (and the
size of the Response Queue proportionally), let's not create an
interrupt stack overflow by having to keep a max completion list
(forw links are not an option because this is common code with
some platforms that don't have link space in their XS_T structures).
A limit of 32 is not unreasonable- I doubt there'd be even this many
request queue completions at a time- remember, most boards now use
fast posting for normal command completion instead of filling out
response queue entries.
In the isp_mboxcmd cleanup, also create an array of command
names so that "ABOUT FIRMWARE" can be printed instead of "CMD #8".
Remove the isp_lostcmd function- it's been deprecated for a while.
Remove isp_dumpregs- the ISP_DUMPREGS goes to the specific bus
register dump fucntion.
Various other cleanups.