scsiconf.h revision 1.30 1 /* $NetBSD: scsiconf.h,v 1.30 1996/07/05 16:19:12 christos Exp $ */
2
3 /*
4 * Copyright (c) 1993, 1994, 1995 Charles Hannum. All rights reserved.
5 *
6 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
7 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
8 * are met:
9 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
10 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
11 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
12 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
13 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
14 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
15 * must display the following acknowledgement:
16 * This product includes software developed by Charles Hannum.
17 * 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
18 * derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
19 *
20 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
21 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
22 * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
23 * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
24 * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
25 * NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
26 * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
27 * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
28 * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
29 * THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
30 */
31
32 /*
33 * Originally written by Julian Elischer (julian (at) tfs.com)
34 * for TRW Financial Systems for use under the MACH(2.5) operating system.
35 *
36 * TRW Financial Systems, in accordance with their agreement with Carnegie
37 * Mellon University, makes this software available to CMU to distribute
38 * or use in any manner that they see fit as long as this message is kept with
39 * the software. For this reason TFS also grants any other persons or
40 * organisations permission to use or modify this software.
41 *
42 * TFS supplies this software to be publicly redistributed
43 * on the understanding that TFS is not responsible for the correct
44 * functioning of this software in any circumstances.
45 *
46 * Ported to run under 386BSD by Julian Elischer (julian (at) tfs.com) Sept 1992
47 */
48
49 #ifndef SCSI_SCSICONF_H
50 #define SCSI_SCSICONF_H 1
51
52 typedef int boolean;
53
54 #include <sys/queue.h>
55 #include <machine/cpu.h>
56 #include <scsi/scsi_debug.h>
57
58 /*
59 * The following documentation tries to describe the relationship between the
60 * various structures defined in this file:
61 *
62 * each adapter type has a scsi_adapter struct. This describes the adapter and
63 * identifies routines that can be called to use the adapter.
64 * each device type has a scsi_device struct. This describes the device and
65 * identifies routines that can be called to use the device.
66 * each existing device position (scsibus + target + lun)
67 * can be described by a scsi_link struct.
68 * Only scsi positions that actually have devices, have a scsi_link
69 * structure assigned. so in effect each device has scsi_link struct.
70 * The scsi_link structure contains information identifying both the
71 * device driver and the adapter driver for that position on that scsi bus,
72 * and can be said to 'link' the two.
73 * each individual scsi bus has an array that points to all the scsi_link
74 * structs associated with that scsi bus. Slots with no device have
75 * a NULL pointer.
76 * each individual device also knows the address of it's own scsi_link
77 * structure.
78 *
79 * -------------
80 *
81 * The key to all this is the scsi_link structure which associates all the
82 * other structures with each other in the correct configuration. The
83 * scsi_link is the connecting information that allows each part of the
84 * scsi system to find the associated other parts.
85 */
86
87 struct buf;
88 struct scsi_xfer;
89
90 /*
91 * These entrypoints are called by the high-end drivers to get services from
92 * whatever low-end drivers they are attached to each adapter type has one of
93 * these statically allocated.
94 */
95 struct scsi_adapter {
96 int (*scsi_cmd) __P((struct scsi_xfer *));
97 void (*scsi_minphys) __P((struct buf *));
98 int (*open_target_lu) __P((void));
99 int (*close_target_lu) __P((void));
100 };
101
102 /*
103 * return values for scsi_cmd()
104 */
105 #define SUCCESSFULLY_QUEUED 0
106 #define TRY_AGAIN_LATER 1
107 #define COMPLETE 2
108 #define ESCAPE_NOT_SUPPORTED 3
109
110 /*
111 * These entry points are called by the low-end drivers to get services from
112 * whatever high-end drivers they are attached to. Each device type has one
113 * of these statically allocated.
114 */
115 struct scsi_device {
116 int (*err_handler) __P((struct scsi_xfer *));
117 /* returns -1 to say err processing done */
118 void (*start) __P((void *));
119
120 int (*async) __P((void));
121 /*
122 * When called with `0' as the second argument, we expect status
123 * back from the upper-level driver. When called with a `1',
124 * we're simply notifying the upper-level driver that the command
125 * is complete and expect no status back.
126 */
127 int (*done) __P((struct scsi_xfer *, int));
128 };
129
130 /*
131 * This structure describes the connection between an adapter driver and
132 * a device driver, and is used by each to call services provided by
133 * the other, and to allow generic scsi glue code to call these services
134 * as well.
135 */
136 struct scsi_link {
137 u_int8_t scsibus; /* the Nth scsibus */
138 u_int8_t target; /* targ of this dev */
139 u_int8_t lun; /* lun of this dev */
140 u_int8_t adapter_target; /* what are we on the scsi bus */
141 u_int8_t openings; /* available operations */
142 u_int8_t active; /* operations in progress */
143 u_int8_t flags; /* flags that all devices have */
144 #define SDEV_REMOVABLE 0x01 /* media is removable */
145 #define SDEV_MEDIA_LOADED 0x02 /* device figures are still valid */
146 #define SDEV_WAITING 0x04 /* a process is waiting for this */
147 #define SDEV_OPEN 0x08 /* at least 1 open session */
148 #define SDEV_DBX 0xf0 /* debuging flags (scsi_debug.h) */
149 u_int8_t quirks; /* per-device oddities */
150 #define SDEV_AUTOSAVE 0x01 /* do implicit SAVEDATAPOINTER on disconnect */
151 #define SDEV_NOSYNCWIDE 0x02 /* does not grok SDTR or WDTR */
152 #define SDEV_NOLUNS 0x04 /* does not grok LUNs */
153 #define SDEV_FORCELUNS 0x08 /* prehistoric drive/ctlr groks LUNs */
154 #define SDEV_NOMODESENSE 0x10 /* removable media/optical drives */
155 struct scsi_device *device; /* device entry points etc. */
156 void *device_softc; /* needed for call to foo_start */
157 struct scsi_adapter *adapter; /* adapter entry points etc. */
158 void *adapter_softc; /* needed for call to foo_scsi_cmd */
159 };
160
161 /*
162 * This describes matching information for scsi_inqmatch(). The more things
163 * match, the higher the configuration priority.
164 */
165 struct scsi_inquiry_pattern {
166 u_int8_t type;
167 boolean removable;
168 char *vendor;
169 char *product;
170 char *revision;
171 };
172
173 /*
174 * One of these is allocated and filled in for each scsi bus.
175 * it holds pointers to allow the scsi bus to get to the driver
176 * That is running each LUN on the bus
177 * it also has a template entry which is the prototype struct
178 * supplied by the adapter driver, this is used to initialise
179 * the others, before they have the rest of the fields filled in
180 */
181 struct scsibus_softc {
182 struct device sc_dev;
183 struct scsi_link *adapter_link; /* prototype supplied by adapter */
184 struct scsi_link *sc_link[8][8];
185 u_int8_t moreluns;
186 };
187
188 /*
189 * This is used to pass information from the high-level configuration code
190 * to the device-specific drivers.
191 */
192 struct scsibus_attach_args {
193 struct scsi_link *sa_sc_link;
194 struct scsi_inquiry_data *sa_inqbuf;
195 };
196
197 /*
198 * Each scsi transaction is fully described by one of these structures
199 * It includes information about the source of the command and also the
200 * device and adapter for which the command is destined.
201 * (via the scsi_link structure)
202 */
203 struct scsi_xfer {
204 LIST_ENTRY(scsi_xfer) free_list;
205 int flags;
206 struct scsi_link *sc_link; /* all about our device and adapter */
207 int retries; /* the number of times to retry */
208 int timeout; /* in milliseconds */
209 struct scsi_generic *cmd; /* The scsi command to execute */
210 int cmdlen; /* how long it is */
211 u_char *data; /* dma address OR a uio address */
212 int datalen; /* data len (blank if uio) */
213 int resid; /* how much buffer was not touched */
214 int error; /* an error value */
215 struct buf *bp; /* If we need to associate with a buf */
216 struct scsi_sense_data sense; /* 32 bytes*/
217 /*
218 * Believe it or not, Some targets fall on the ground with
219 * anything but a certain sense length.
220 */
221 int req_sense_length; /* Explicit request sense length */
222 u_int8_t status; /* SCSI status */
223 struct scsi_generic cmdstore; /* stash the command in here */
224 };
225
226 /*
227 * Per-request Flag values
228 */
229 #define SCSI_NOSLEEP 0x0001 /* don't sleep */
230 #define SCSI_POLL 0x0002 /* poll for completion */
231 #define SCSI_AUTOCONF 0x0003 /* shorthand for SCSI_POLL | SCSI_NOSLEEP */
232 #define SCSI_USER 0x0004 /* Is a user cmd, call scsi_user_done */
233 #define ITSDONE 0x0008 /* the transfer is as done as it gets */
234 #define INUSE 0x0010 /* The scsi_xfer block is in use */
235 #define SCSI_SILENT 0x0020 /* don't announce NOT READY or MEDIA CHANGE */
236 #define SCSI_IGNORE_NOT_READY 0x0040 /* ignore NOT READY */
237 #define SCSI_IGNORE_MEDIA_CHANGE 0x0080 /* ignore MEDIA CHANGE */
238 #define SCSI_IGNORE_ILLEGAL_REQUEST 0x0100 /* ignore ILLEGAL REQUEST */
239 #define SCSI_RESET 0x0200 /* Reset the device in question */
240 #define SCSI_DATA_UIO 0x0400 /* The data address refers to a UIO */
241 #define SCSI_DATA_IN 0x0800 /* expect data to come INTO memory */
242 #define SCSI_DATA_OUT 0x1000 /* expect data to flow OUT of memory */
243 #define SCSI_TARGET 0x2000 /* This defines a TARGET mode op. */
244 #define SCSI_ESCAPE 0x4000 /* Escape operation */
245
246 /*
247 * Escape op codes. This provides an extensible setup for operations
248 * that are not scsi commands. They are intended for modal operations.
249 */
250
251 #define SCSI_OP_TARGET 0x0001
252 #define SCSI_OP_RESET 0x0002
253 #define SCSI_OP_BDINFO 0x0003
254
255 /*
256 * Error values an adapter driver may return
257 */
258 #define XS_NOERROR 0 /* there is no error, (sense is invalid) */
259 #define XS_SENSE 1 /* Check the returned sense for the error */
260 #define XS_DRIVER_STUFFUP 2 /* Driver failed to perform operation */
261 #define XS_SELTIMEOUT 3 /* The device timed out.. turned off? */
262 #define XS_TIMEOUT 4 /* The Timeout reported was caught by SW */
263 #define XS_BUSY 5 /* The device busy, try again later? */
264
265 caddr_t scsi_inqmatch __P((struct scsi_inquiry_data *, caddr_t, int, int, int *));
266
267 struct scsi_xfer *scsi_get_xs __P((struct scsi_link *, int));
268 void scsi_free_xs __P((struct scsi_xfer *, int));
269 int scsi_execute_xs __P((struct scsi_xfer *));
270 u_long scsi_size __P((struct scsi_link *, int));
271 int scsi_test_unit_ready __P((struct scsi_link *, int));
272 int scsi_change_def __P((struct scsi_link *, int));
273 int scsi_inquire __P((struct scsi_link *, struct scsi_inquiry_data *, int));
274 int scsi_prevent __P((struct scsi_link *, int, int));
275 int scsi_start __P((struct scsi_link *, int, int));
276 void scsi_done __P((struct scsi_xfer *));
277 void scsi_user_done __P((struct scsi_xfer *));
278 int scsi_scsi_cmd __P((struct scsi_link *, struct scsi_generic *,
279 int cmdlen, u_char *data_addr,
280 int datalen, int retries,
281 int timeout, struct buf *bp,
282 int flags));
283 int scsi_do_ioctl __P((struct scsi_link *, dev_t, u_long, caddr_t, int, struct proc *));
284 void sc_print_addr __P((struct scsi_link *));
285
286 void show_scsi_xs __P((struct scsi_xfer *));
287 void show_scsi_cmd __P((struct scsi_xfer *));
288 void show_mem __P((u_char *, int));
289 int scsi_probe_busses __P((int, int, int));
290 void scsi_strvis __P((u_char *, u_char *, int));
291
292 static __inline void _lto2b __P((u_int32_t val, u_int8_t *bytes));
293 static __inline void _lto3b __P((u_int32_t val, u_int8_t *bytes));
294 static __inline void _lto4b __P((u_int32_t val, u_int8_t *bytes));
295 static __inline u_int32_t _2btol __P((u_int8_t *bytes));
296 static __inline u_int32_t _3btol __P((u_int8_t *bytes));
297 static __inline u_int32_t _4btol __P((u_int8_t *bytes));
298
299 static __inline void _lto2l __P((u_int32_t val, u_int8_t *bytes));
300 static __inline void _lto3l __P((u_int32_t val, u_int8_t *bytes));
301 static __inline void _lto4l __P((u_int32_t val, u_int8_t *bytes));
302 static __inline u_int32_t _2ltol __P((u_int8_t *bytes));
303 static __inline u_int32_t _3ltol __P((u_int8_t *bytes));
304 static __inline u_int32_t _4ltol __P((u_int8_t *bytes));
305
306 static __inline void
307 _lto2b(val, bytes)
308 u_int32_t val;
309 u_int8_t *bytes;
310 {
311
312 bytes[0] = (val >> 8) & 0xff;
313 bytes[1] = val & 0xff;
314 }
315
316 static __inline void
317 _lto3b(val, bytes)
318 u_int32_t val;
319 u_int8_t *bytes;
320 {
321
322 bytes[0] = (val >> 16) & 0xff;
323 bytes[1] = (val >> 8) & 0xff;
324 bytes[2] = val & 0xff;
325 }
326
327 static __inline void
328 _lto4b(val, bytes)
329 u_int32_t val;
330 u_int8_t *bytes;
331 {
332
333 bytes[0] = (val >> 24) & 0xff;
334 bytes[1] = (val >> 16) & 0xff;
335 bytes[2] = (val >> 8) & 0xff;
336 bytes[3] = val & 0xff;
337 }
338
339 static __inline u_int32_t
340 _2btol(bytes)
341 u_int8_t *bytes;
342 {
343 register u_int32_t rv;
344
345 rv = (bytes[0] << 8) |
346 bytes[1];
347 return (rv);
348 }
349
350 static __inline u_int32_t
351 _3btol(bytes)
352 u_int8_t *bytes;
353 {
354 register u_int32_t rv;
355
356 rv = (bytes[0] << 16) |
357 (bytes[1] << 8) |
358 bytes[2];
359 return (rv);
360 }
361
362 static __inline u_int32_t
363 _4btol(bytes)
364 u_int8_t *bytes;
365 {
366 register u_int32_t rv;
367
368 rv = (bytes[0] << 24) |
369 (bytes[1] << 16) |
370 (bytes[2] << 8) |
371 bytes[3];
372 return (rv);
373 }
374
375 static __inline void
376 _lto2l(val, bytes)
377 u_int32_t val;
378 u_int8_t *bytes;
379 {
380
381 bytes[0] = val & 0xff;
382 bytes[1] = (val >> 8) & 0xff;
383 }
384
385 static __inline void
386 _lto3l(val, bytes)
387 u_int32_t val;
388 u_int8_t *bytes;
389 {
390
391 bytes[0] = val & 0xff;
392 bytes[1] = (val >> 8) & 0xff;
393 bytes[2] = (val >> 16) & 0xff;
394 }
395
396 static __inline void
397 _lto4l(val, bytes)
398 u_int32_t val;
399 u_int8_t *bytes;
400 {
401
402 bytes[0] = val & 0xff;
403 bytes[1] = (val >> 8) & 0xff;
404 bytes[2] = (val >> 16) & 0xff;
405 bytes[3] = (val >> 24) & 0xff;
406 }
407
408 static __inline u_int32_t
409 _2ltol(bytes)
410 u_int8_t *bytes;
411 {
412 register u_int32_t rv;
413
414 rv = bytes[0] |
415 (bytes[1] << 8);
416 return (rv);
417 }
418
419 static __inline u_int32_t
420 _3ltol(bytes)
421 u_int8_t *bytes;
422 {
423 register u_int32_t rv;
424
425 rv = bytes[0] |
426 (bytes[1] << 8) |
427 (bytes[2] << 16);
428 return (rv);
429 }
430
431 static __inline u_int32_t
432 _4ltol(bytes)
433 u_int8_t *bytes;
434 {
435 register u_int32_t rv;
436
437 rv = bytes[0] |
438 (bytes[1] << 8) |
439 (bytes[2] << 16) |
440 (bytes[3] << 24);
441 return (rv);
442 }
443
444 #endif /* SCSI_SCSICONF_H */
445