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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 | The tmscsim driver ================== 1. Purpose and history 2. Installation 3. Features 4. Configuration via /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? 5. Configuration via boot/module params 6. Potential improvements 7. Bug reports, debugging and updates 8. Acknowledgements 1. Purpose and history ---------------------- The tmscsim driver supports PCI SCSI Host Adapters based on the AM53C974 chip. AM53C974 based SCSI adapters include: Tekram DC390, DC390T Dawicontrol 2974 QLogic Fast! PCI Basic some on-board adapters (This is most probably not a complete list) It has originally written by C.L. Huang from the Tekram corp. to support the Tekram DC390(T) adapter. This is where the name comes from: tm = Tekram scsi = SCSI driver, m = AMD (?) as opposed to w for the DC390W/U/F (NCR53c8X5, X=2/7) driver. Yes, there was also a driver for the latter, tmscsimw, which supported DC390W/U/F adapters. It's not maintained any more, as the ncr53c8xx is perfectly supporting these adpaters since some time. The driver first appeared in April 1996, exclusively supported the DC390 and has been enhanced since then in various steps. In May 1998 support for general AM53C974 based adapters and some possibilities to configure it were added. The non-DC390 support works by assuming some values for the data normally taken from the DC390 EEPROM. See below (chapter 5) for details. When using the DC390, the configuration is still be done using the DC390 BIOS setup. The DC390 EEPROM is read and used by the driver, any boot or module parameters (chapter 5) are ignored! However, you can change settings dynamically, as described in chapter 4. For a more detailed description of the driver's history, see the first lines of tmscsim.c. The numbering scheme isn't consistent. The first versions went from 1.00 to 1.12, then 1.20a to 1.20t. Finally I decided to use the ncr53c8xx scheme. So the next revisions will be 2.0a to 2.0X (stable), 2.1a to 2.1X (experimental), 2.2a to 2.2X (stable, again) etc. (X = anything between a and z.) If I send fixes to people for testing, I create intermediate versions with a digit appended, e.g. 2.0c3. 2. Installation --------------- If you got any recent kernel with this driver and document included in linux/drivers/scsi, you basically have to do nothing special to use this driver. Of course you have to choose to compile SCSI support and DC390(T) support into your kernel or as module when configuring your kernel for compiling. If you got an old kernel (pre 2.1.127, pre 2.0.37p1) with an old version of this driver: Get dc390-21125-20b.diff.gz or dc390-2036p21-20b1.diff.gz from my website and apply the patch. If you want to do it manually, you should copy the files (dc390.h, tmscsim.h, tmscsim.c, scsiiom.c and README.tmscsim) from this directory to linux/drivers/scsi. You have to recompile your kernel/module of course. You should apply the three patches included in dc390-120-kernel.diff (Applying them: cd /usr/src; patch -p0 <~/dc390-120-kernel.diff) The patches are against 2.1.125, so you might have to manually resolve rejections when applying to another kernel version. The patches will update the kernel startup code to allow boot parameters to be passed to the driver, update the Documentation and finally offer you the possibility to omit the non-DC390 parts of the driver. (By selecting "Omit support for non DC390" you basically disable the emulation of a DC390 EEPROM for non DC390 adapters. This saves a few bytes of memory.) If you got a very old kernel without the tmscsim driver (pre 2.0.31) I recommend upgrading your kernel. However, if you don't want to, please contact me to get the appropriate patches. Upgrading a SCSI driver is always a delicate thing to do. The 2.0 driver has proven stable on many systems, but it's still a good idea to take some precautions. In an ideal world you would have a full backup of your disks. The world isn't ideal and most people don't have full backups (me neither). So take at least the following measures: * make your kernel remount the FS read-only on detecting an error: tune2fs -e remount-ro /dev/sd?? * have copies of your SCSI disk's partition tables on some safe location: dd if=/dev/sda of=/mnt/floppy/sda bs=512 count=1 * make sure you are able to boot Linux (e.g. from floppy disk using InitRD) if your SCSI disk gets corrupted. You can use ftp://student.physik.uni-dortmund.de/pub/linux/kernel/bootdisk.gz One more warning: I used to overclock my PCI bus to 41.67 MHz. My Tekram DC390F (Sym53c875) accepted this as well as my Millenium. But the Am53C974 produced errors and started to corrupt my disks. So don't do that! A 37.50 MHz PCI bus works for me, though, but I don't recommend using higher clocks than the 33.33 MHz being in the PCI spec. If you want to share the IRQ with another device and the driver refuses to do, you might succeed with changing the DC390_IRQ type in tmscsim.c to SA_SHIRQ | SA_INTERRUPT. 3.Features ---------- - SCSI * Tagged command queueing * Sync speed up to 10 MHz * Disconnection * Multiple LUNs - General / Linux interface * Support for up to 4 AM53C974 adapters. * DC390 EEPROM usage or boot/module params * Information via cat /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? * Dynamically configurable by writing to /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? * Dynamic allocation of resources * SMP support: Locking on io_request lock (Linux 2.1/2.2) or adapter specific locks (Linux 2.3) * Uniform source code for Linux-2.x.y * Support for dyn. addition/removal of devices via add/remove-single-device (Try: echo "scsi add-single-device H C I L" >/proc/scsi/scsi H = Host, C = Channel, I = SCSI ID, L = SCSI LUN.) Use with care! * Try to use the partition table for the determination of the mapping 4. Configuration via /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? ----------------------------------------- First of all look at the output of /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? by typing cat /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? The "?" should be replaced by the SCSI host number. (The shell might do this for you.) You will see some info regarding the adapter and, at the end, a listing of the attached devices and their settings. Here's an example: garloff@kg1:/home/garloff > cat /proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 Tekram DC390/AM53C974 PCI SCSI Host Adapter, Driver Version 1.20s, 1998/08/20 SCSI Host Nr 0, AM53C974 Adapter Nr 0 IOPortBase 0x6200, IRQLevel 0x09 MaxID 7, MaxLUN 8, AdapterID 7, SelTimeout 250 ms TagMaxNum 16, Status 0, ACBFlag 0, GlitchEater 24 ns Statistics: Nr of Cmnds 39563, Cmnds not sent directly 0, Out of SRB conds 0 Nr of lost arbitrations 17 Nr of attached devices: 4, Nr of DCBs: 4 Idx ID LUN Prty Sync DsCn SndS TagQ STOP NegoPeriod SyncSpeed SyncOffs 00 00 00 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No 100 ns 10.0 M 15 01 01 00 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No 100 ns 10.0 M 15 02 03 00 Yes Yes Yes Yes No No 100 ns 10.0 M 15 03 05 00 Yes No Yes Yes No No (200 ns) Note that the settings MaxID and MaxLUN are not zero- but one-based, which means that a setting MaxLUN=4, will result in the support of LUNs 0..3. This is somehow inconvenient, but the way the mid-level SCSI code expects it to be. ACB and DCB are acronyms for Adapter Control Block and Device Control Block. These are data structures of the driver containing information about the adapter and the connected SCSI devices respectively. Idx is the device index (just a consecutive number for the driver), ID and LUN are the SCSI ID and LUN, Prty means Parity checking, Sync synchronous negotiation, DsCn Disconnection, SndS Send Start command on startup (not used by the driver) and TagQ Tagged Command Queueing. NegoPeriod and SyncSpeed are somehow redundant, because they are reciprocal values (1 / 112 ns = 8.9 MHz). At least in theory. The driver is able to adjust the NegoPeriod more accurate (4ns) than the SyncSpeed (1 / 25ns). I don't know if certain devices will have problems with this discrepancy. Max. speed is 10 MHz corresp. to a min. NegoPeriod of 100 ns. (The driver allows slightly higher speeds if the devices (Ultra SCSI) accept it, but that's out of adapter spec, on your own risk and unlikely to improve performance. You're likely to crash your disks.) SyncOffs is the offset used for synchronous negotiations; max. is 15. The last values are only shown, if Sync is enabled. (NegoPeriod is still displayed in brackets to show the values which will be used after enabling Sync.) The STOP parameter is for testing/debugging purposes only and should bet set to No. Please don't fiddle with it, unless you want to get rid of the contents of your disk. If you want to change a setting, you can do that by writing to /proc/scsi/tmscsim/?. Basically you have to imitate the output of driver. (Don't use the brackets for NegoPeriod on Sync disabled devices.) You don't have to care about capitalisation. The driver will accept space, tab, comma, = and : as separators. There are three kinds of changes: (1) Change driver settings: You type the names of the parameters and the params following it. Example: echo "MaxLUN=8 seltimeout 200" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 Note that you can only change MaxID, MaxLUN, AdapterID, SelTimeOut, TagMaxNum, ACBFlag and GlitchEater. Don't change ACBFlag unless you want to see what happens, if the driver hangs. (2) Change device settings: You write a config line to the driver. The Nr must match the ID and LUN given. If you give "-" as parameter, it is ignored and the corresponding setting won't be changed. You can use "y" or "n" instead of "Yes" and "No" if you want to. You don't need to specify a full line. The driver automatically performs an INQUIRY on the device if necessary to check if it is capable to operate with the given settings (Sync, TagQ). Examples: echo "0 0 0 y y y - y - 10" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 echo "3 5 0 y n y" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 To give a short explanation of the first example: The first three numbers, "0 0 0" (Device index 0, SCSI ID 0, SCSI LUN 0), select the device to which the following parameters apply. Note that it would be sufficient to use the index or both SCSI ID and LUN, but I chose to require all three to have a syntax similar to the output. The following "y y y - y" enables Parity checking, enables Synchronous transfers, Disconnection, leaves Send Start (not used) untouched and enables Tagged Command Queueing for the selected device. The "-" skips the Negotiation Period setting but the "10" sets the max sync. speed to 10 MHz. It's useless to specify both NegoPeriod and SyncSpeed as discussed above. The values used in this example will result in maximum performance. (3) Special commands: You can force a SCSI bus reset, an INQUIRY command and the removal of a device's DCB. This is only used for debugging when you meet problems. The parameter of the INQUIRY and remove command is the device index as shown by the output of /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? in the device listing in the first column (Idx). Examples: echo "reset" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 echo "inquiry 1" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 echo "remove 2" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/1 Note that you will meet problems when you remove a device's DCB with the remove command if it contains partitions which are mounted. Only use it after unmounting its partitions, telling the SCSI mid-level code to remove it (scsi remove-single-device) and you really need a few bytes of memory. I'd suggest reviewing the output of /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? after changing settings to see if everything changed as requested. 5. Configuration via boot/module parameters ------------------------------------------- With the DC390, the driver reads its EEPROM settings and IGNORES boot / module parameters. If you want to override the EEPROM settings of a DC390, you have to use the /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? interface described in the above chapter. However, if you do have another AM53C974 based adapter you might want to adjust some settings before you are able to write to the /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? pseudo-file, e.g. if you want to use another adapter ID than 7. (Note that the log message "DC390: No EEPROM found!" is normal without a DC390.) For this purpose, you can pass options to the driver before it is initialised by using kernel or module parameters. See lilo(8) or modprobe(1) manual pages on how to pass params to the kernel or a module. The syntax of the params is much shorter than the syntax of the /proc/... interface. This makes it a little bit more difficult to use. However, long parameter lines have the risk to be misinterpreted and the length of kernel parameters is limited. As the support for non-DC390 adapters works by simulating the values of the DC390 EEPROM, the settings are given in a DC390 BIOS' way. Here's the syntax: tmscsim=AdaptID,SpdIdx,DevMode,AdaptMode,TaggedCmnds Each of the parameters is a number, containing the described information: * AdaptID: The SCSI ID of the host adapter. Must be in the range 0..7 Default is 7. * SpdIdx: The index of the maximum speed as in the DC390 BIOS. The values 0..7 mean 10, 8.0, 6.7, 5.7, 5.0, 4.0, 3.1 and 2 MHz resp. Default is 1 (8.0 MHz). * DevMode is a bit mapped value describing the per-device features. It applies to all devices. (Sync, Disc and TagQ will only apply, if the device supports it.) The meaning of the bits (* = default): Bit Val(hex) Val(dec) Meaning *0 0x01 1 Parity check *1 0x02 2 Synchronous Negotiation *2 0x04 4 Disconnection *3 0x08 8 Send Start command on startup. (Not used) *4 0x10 16 Tagged Queueing As usual, the desired value is obtained by adding the wanted values. If you want to enable all values, e.g., you would use 31(0x1f). Default is 31. * AdaptMode is a bit mapped value describing the enabled adapter features. Bit Val(hex) Val(dec) Meaning *0 0x01 1 Support more than two drives. (Not used) *1 0x02 2 Use DOS compatible mapping for HDs greater than 1GB. *2 0x04 4 Reset SCSI Bus on startup. *3 0x08 8 Active Negation: Improves SCSI Bus noise immunity. 4 0x10 16 Immediate return on BIOS seek command. (Not used) (*)5 0x20 32 Check for LUNs >= 1. The default for LUN Check depends on CONFIG_SCSI_MULTI_LUN. * TaggedCmnds is a number indicating the maximum number of Tagged Commands. It is the binary logarithm - 1 of the actual number. Max is 4 (32). Value Number of Tagged Commands 0 2 1 4 2 8 *3 16 4 32 Example: modprobe tmscsim tmscsim=6,2,31 would set the adapter ID to 6, max. speed to 6.7 MHz, enable all device features and leave the adapter features and the number of Tagged Commands to the defaults. As you can see, you don't need to specify all of the five params. The defaults (7,1,31,15,3) are aggressive to allow good performance. You can use tmscsim=7,0,31,63,4 for maximum performance, if your SCSI chain is perfect. If you meet problems, you can use tmscsim=-1 which is a shortcut for tmscsim=7,4,9,15,2. 6. Potential improvements ------------------------- Most of the intended work on the driver has been done. Here are a few ideas to further improve its usability: * More intelligent abort() routine * Implement new_eh code (Linux-2.1+) * Have the mid-level code (and not the driver) handle more of the various conditions. * Rework command queueing in the driver * More user friendly boot/module param syntax Further investigation on these problems: * Driver hangs with sync readcdda (xcdroast) (most probably VIA PCI error) Known problems: * There was a report that with a certain Scanner, the last SCSI command won't be finished correctly. This might be a command queueing bug or a bug in SCSI implementation of the scanner. Issueing another command to the scanner seems to help. (Try echo "INQUIRY x" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/?, where x is the index (not the SCSI ID!) of the scanner. See 4.(3).) * If there is a valid partition table, the driver will use it for determing the mapping. Other operating systems may not like this mapping, though it's consistent with the BIOS' behaviour. Old DC390 drivers ignored the partition table and used a H/S = 64/32 or 255/63 translation. So if you want to be compatible to those, use this old mapping when creating partition tables. * In some situations, the driver will get stuck in an abort loop. Please disable DsCn, if you meet this problem. Please contact me for further debugging. * 2.1.115+: Linux misses locks in sr_ioctl.c and scsi_ioctl.c There used to be a patch included here, which partially solved the problem. I suggest you contact Chiaki Ishikawa <ishikawa@yk.rim.or.jp>, Richard Waltham <dormouse@farsrobt.demon.co.uk> or Doug Ledford <dledford@dialnet.net>, if you want to help further debugging it. * 2.0.35: CD changers (e.g. NAKAMICHI MBR-7.{0,2}) have problems because the mid-level code doesn't handle BLIST_SINGLELUN correctly. There used to be a patch included here to fix this, but I was told that it is fixed in 2.0.36. 7. Bug reports, debugging and updates ------------------------------------- Whenever you have problems with the driver, you are invited to ask the author for help. However, I'd suggest reading the docs and trying to solve the problem yourself, first. If you find something, which you believe to be a bug, please report it to me. Please append the output of /proc/scsi/scsi, /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? and maybe the DC390 log messages to the report. Bug reports should be send to me (Kurt Garloff <dc390@garloff.de>) as well as to the linux-scsi list (<linux-scsi@vger.rutgers.edu>), as sometimes bugs are caused by the SCSI mid-level code. I will ask you for some more details and probably I will also ask you to enable some of the DEBUG options in the driver (tmscsim.c:DC390_DEBUGXXX defines). The driver will produce some data for the syslog facility then. Beware: If your syslog gets written to a SCSI disk connected to your AM53C974, the logging might produce log output again, and you might end having your box spending most of its time doing the logging. The latest version of the driver can be found at: http://www.garloff.de/kurt/linux/dc390/ and ftp://student.physik.uni-dortmund.de/pub/linux/kernel/dc390/ (The latter might shut down some day.) 8. Acknowledgements ------------------- Thanks to Linus Torvalds, Alan Cox, David Miller, Rik v. Riel, the FSF people, the XFree86 team and all the others for the wonderful OS and software. Thanks to C.L. Huang and Philip Giang (Tekram) for the initial driver release and support. Thanks to Doug Ledford, Gerard Roudier for support with SCSI coding. Thanks to a lot of people (espec. Chiaki Ishikawa, Andreas Haumer, Hubert Tonneau) for intensively testing the driver (and even risking data loss doing this during early revisions). ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Written by Kurt Garloff <kurt@garloff.de> 1998/06/11 Last updated 1998/12/25, driver revision 2.0d $Id: README.tmscsim,v 2.9 1998/12/25 18:04:20 garloff Exp $ |