/* * CDDL HEADER START * * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the * Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions * and limitations under the License. * * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] * * CDDL HEADER END */ /* * Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. * Use is subject to license terms. */ #ifndef _SYS_SCSI_CONF_AUTOCONF_H #define _SYS_SCSI_CONF_AUTOCONF_H #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif /* * SCSI subsystem scsi_options */ /* * Following are for debugging purposes (few Sun drivers support this) */ #define SCSI_DEBUG_TGT 0x1 /* debug statements in target drivers */ #define SCSI_DEBUG_LIB 0x2 /* debug statements in library */ #define SCSI_DEBUG_HA 0x4 /* debug statements in host adapters */ /* * Following are applicable to all interconnects */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_LINK 0x10 /* Global linked commands */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_TAG 0x80 /* Global tagged command support */ /* * Following are for parallel SCSI only */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_DR 0x8 /* Global disconnect/reconnect */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_SYNC 0x20 /* Global synchronous xfer capability */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_PARITY 0x40 /* Global parity support */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_FAST 0x100 /* Global FAST scsi support */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_WIDE 0x200 /* Global WIDE scsi support */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_FAST20 0x400 /* Global FAST20 scsi support */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_FAST40 0x800 /* Global FAST40 scsi support */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_FAST80 0x1000 /* Global FAST80 scsi support */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_FAST160 0x2000 /* Global FAST160 scsi support */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_FAST320 0x4000 /* Global FAST320 scsi support */ /* * The following 3 bits are for being able to limit the max. number of LUNs * a nexus driver will allow -- "default" means that the adapter will * continue its default behavior. */ #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_MASK (0x70000) #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_DEFAULT 0x00000 #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_1 0x10000 #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_8 0x20000 #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_16 0x30000 #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_32 0x40000 #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_64 0x50000 #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_128 0x60000 #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_256 0x70000 #define SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS(n) ((n) & SCSI_OPTIONS_NLUNS_MASK) #define SCSI_OPTIONS_QAS 0x100000 /* Global Quick Arbitration Select */ /* * SCSI autoconfiguration definitions. * * The library routine scsi_slave() is provided as a service to target * driver to check for existence and readiness of a SCSI device. It is * defined as: * * int scsi_slave(struct scsi_device *devp, int (*callback)(void)) * * where devp is the scsi_device structure passed to the target driver * at probe time, and where callback declares whether scsi_slave() can * sleep awaiting resources or must return an error if it cannot get * resources (callback == SLEEP_FUNC implies that scsi_slave() * can sleep - although this * does not fully guarantee that resources will become available as * some are allocated from the iopbmap which may just be completely * full). The user call also supplies a callback function or NULL_FUNC. * In the process of determining the existence of a SCSI device, * scsi_slave will allocate space for the sd_inq field of the scsi_device * pointed to by devp (if it is non-zero upon entry). * * scsi_slave() attempts to follow this sequence in order to determine * the existence of a SCSI device: * * Attempt to send 2 TEST UNIT READY commands to the device. * * If that gets a check condition, run a non-extended * REQUEST SENSE command. Ignore the results of it, as * a the non-extended sense information contains only * Vendor Unique error codes (the idea is that during * probe time the nearly invariant first command to a * device will get a Check Condition, and the real reason * is that the device wants to tell you that a SCSI bus * reset just occurred. * * Attempt to allocate an inquiry buffer and * run an INQUIRY command (with response data format 0 set). * * If that gets a check condition, run another * non-extended REQUEST SENSE command. * * The library routine scsi_probe() is provided as a service to target * driver to check for bare-bones existence of a SCSI device. It is * defined as: * * int scsi_probe(struct scsi_device *devp, int (*callback)(void)) * * scsi_probe() only executes an inquiry. * * Both functions return one of the integer values as defined below: */ #define SCSIPROBE_EXISTS 0 /* device exists, inquiry data valid */ #define SCSIPROBE_NONCCS 1 /* device exists, no inquiry data */ #define SCSIPROBE_NORESP 2 /* device didn't respond */ #define SCSIPROBE_NOMEM 3 /* no space available for structures */ #define SCSIPROBE_FAILURE 4 /* polled cmnd failure- unspecified */ #define SCSIPROBE_BUSY 5 /* device was busy */ #define SCSIPROBE_NOMEM_CB 6 /* no space, callback queued */ #define SCSIPROBE_ASCII \ {"EXISTS", "NONCCS", "NORESP", "NOMEM", \ "FAILURE", "BUSY", "NOMEM_CB", NULL} /* * default value for scsi_reset_delay */ #define SCSI_DEFAULT_RESET_DELAY 3000 /* * default value for scsi_selection_timeout */ #define SCSI_DEFAULT_SELECTION_TIMEOUT 250 /* * SCSI subsystem scsi_enumeration options. * * Knob for SPI (SCSI Parallel Intrconnect) enumeration. Unless an HBA defines * it's own tran_bus_config, SPI enumeration is used. The "scsi_enumeration" * knob determines how SPI enumeration is performed. * * The global variable "scsi_enumeration" is used as the default value of the * "scsi-enumeration" property. In addition to enabling/disabling enumeration * (bit 0), target and lun threading can be specified. Having things * multi-threaded does not guarantee reduce configuration time, however when * the bus is marginal multi-threading can substaintaly reduce configuration * time because targets negotiate to stable transfer speeds in parallel - so * all targets have stabalized by the time the sequential attach(9E) operations * begin. Running multi-threaded also helps verification of framework and HBA * locking: a BUS_CONFIG_ALL is equivalent to every target and lun combination * getting a BUS_CONFIG_ONE from a separate thread at the same time. A disable * mechanism is provided to accomidate buggy HBAs (set scsi-enumeration=7 * driver.conf). Values are: * * 0 driver.conf enumeration * 1 dynamic enumeration with target and lun multi-threading. * 3 dynamic enumeration with lun multi-threading disabled. * 5 dynamic enumeration with target multi-threading disabled; * 7 dynamic enumeration with target/lun multi-threading disabled. */ #define SCSI_ENUMERATION_ENABLE 0x1 #define SCSI_ENUMERATION_MT_LUN_DISABLE 0x2 #define SCSI_ENUMERATION_MT_TARGET_DISABLE 0x4 #ifdef _KERNEL /* * Global SCSI config variables / options */ extern int scsi_options; extern int scsi_enumeration; extern unsigned int scsi_reset_delay; /* specified in milli seconds */ extern int scsi_tag_age_limit; extern int scsi_watchdog_tick; extern int scsi_selection_timeout; /* specified in milli seconds */ extern int scsi_host_id; extern int scsi_fm_capable; #endif /* _KERNEL */ #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif /* _SYS_SCSI_CONF_AUTOCONF_H */