Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
ken
915501ccb2 Fix ATAPI/USB/Firewire CDROM drive handling in cd(4) and hopefully fix
a number of related problems along the way.

 - Automatically detect CDROM drives that can't handle 6 byte mode
   sense and mode select, and adjust our command size accordingly.
   We have to handle this in the cd(4) driver (where the buffers are
   allocated), since the parameter list length is different for the
   6 and 10 byte mode sense commands.

 - Remove MODE_SENSE and MODE_SELECT translation removed in ATAPICAM
   and in the umass(4) driver, since there's no way for that to work
   properly.

 - Add a quirk entry for CDROM drives that just hang when they get a 6
   byte mode sense or mode select.  The reason for the quirk must be
   documented in a PR, and all quirks must be approved by
   ken@FreeBSD.org.  This is to make sure that we fully understand why
   each quirk is needed.  Once the CAM_NEW_TRAN_CODE is finished, we
   should be able to remove any such quirks, since we'll know what
   protocol the drive speaks (SCSI, ATAPI, etc.) and therefore whether
   we should use 6 or 10 byte mode sense/select commands.

 - Change the way the da(4) handles the no_6_byte sysctl.  There is
   now a per-drive sysctl to set the minimum command size for that
   particular disk.  (Since you could have multiple disks with
   multiple requirements in one system.)

 - Loader tunable support for all the sysctls in the da(4) and cd(4)
   drivers.

 - Add a CDIOCCLOSE ioctl for cd(4) (bde pointed this out a long
   time ago).

 - Add a media validation routine (cdcheckmedia()) to the cd(4)
   driver, to fix some problems bde pointed out a long time ago.  We
   now allow open() to succeed no matter what, but if we don't detect
   valid media, the user can only issue CDIOCCLOSE or CDIOCEJECT
   ioctls.

 - The media validation routine also reads the table of contents off
   the drive.  We use the table of contents to implement the
   CDIOCPLAYTRACKS ioctl using the PLAY AUDIO MSF command.  The
   PLAY AUDIO TRACK INDEX command that we previously used was
   deprecated after SCSI-2.  It works in every SCSI CDROM I've tried,
   but doesn't seem to work on ATAPI CDROM drives.  We still use the
   play audio track index command if we don't have a valid TOC, but
   I suppose it'll fail anyway in that case.

 - Add _len() versions of scsi_mode_sense() and scsi_mode_select() so
   that we can specify the minimum command length.

 - Fix a couple of formatting problems in the sense printing code.

MFC after: 	4 weeks
2003-02-21 06:19:38 +00:00
njl
1813115081 * Add CDRIOC{READ,WRITE}SPEED ioctls to cd(4). Units are in KB/sec.
* Change atapi-cd ioctls to use the same units.
* Change burncd, cdcontrol to convert CDROM speed to KB/sec before
calling the ioctl.  Add a "max" speed option for their command lines.

This change does not break ABI but does change the units passed through
the ioctl so 3rd party software that uses cdrio.h will have to convert
(most likely by multiplying CDROM speed by 177 to get KB/s).

PR:		kern/36845
Submitted by:	Philipp Mergenthaler <p@i609a.hadiko.de> (CAM ioctls)
Reviewed by:	sos, ken
MFC after:	1 month
2002-10-18 22:03:39 +00:00
phk
6be6d245a4 Remove spurious ';'
Obtained from:	~bde/sys.dif.gz
2002-02-10 21:36:13 +00:00
ken
d8f1e148f1 Add support for the DVD ioctl interface. 2000-05-12 03:36:02 +00:00
peter
22f6069a2a Add $FreeBSD$ 2000-05-01 20:32:07 +00:00
ken
dafd644ddd Some fixes to the CD driver that may fix PR kern/7996. The data direction
flags on some of the operations in the driver weren't quite right.  Also,
clean up scsi_cd.h, change u_char to u_int8_t.

I'm surprised this problem didn't show up sooner.  (the code has been in
there almost a year and a half)

PR:		        7996
Reviewed by:	        ken
Submitted (mostly) by:	gibbs
1998-09-20 22:48:15 +00:00
gibbs
cb986cde46 SCSI Peripheral drivers for CAM:
da	- Direct Access Devices (disks, optical devices, SS disks)
	cd	- CDROM (or devices that can act like them, WORM, CD-RW, etc)
	ch	- Medium Changer devices.
	sa	- Sequential Access Devices (tape drives)
	pass	- Application pass-thru driver
	targ	- Target Mode "Processor Target" Emulator
	pt	- Processor Target Devices (scanners, cpus, etc.)

Submitted by:	The CAM Team
1998-09-15 06:36:34 +00:00