Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | #ifndef _SCSI_GENERIC_H |
| 2 | #define _SCSI_GENERIC_H |
| 3 | |
| 4 | #include <linux/compiler.h> |
| 5 | |
| 6 | /* |
| 7 | History: |
| 8 | Started: Aug 9 by Lawrence Foard (entropy@world.std.com), to allow user |
| 9 | process control of SCSI devices. |
| 10 | Development Sponsored by Killy Corp. NY NY |
| 11 | Original driver (sg.h): |
| 12 | * Copyright (C) 1992 Lawrence Foard |
| 13 | Version 2 and 3 extensions to driver: |
| 14 | * Copyright (C) 1998 - 2003 Douglas Gilbert |
| 15 | |
| 16 | Version: 3.5.29 (20030529) |
| 17 | This version is for 2.5 series kernels. |
| 18 | |
| 19 | Changes since 3.5.28 (20030308) |
| 20 | - fix bug introduced in version 3.1.24 (last segment of sgat list) |
| 21 | Changes since 3.5.27 (20020812) |
| 22 | - remove procfs entries: hosts, host_hdr + host_strs (now in sysfs) |
| 23 | - add sysfs sg driver params: def_reserved_size, allow_dio, version |
| 24 | - new boot option: "sg_allow_dio" and module parameter: "allow_dio" |
| 25 | - multiple internal changes due to scsi subsystem rework |
| 26 | Changes since 3.5.26 (20020708) |
| 27 | - re-add direct IO using Kai Makisara's work |
| 28 | - re-tab to 8, start using C99-isms |
| 29 | - simplify memory management |
| 30 | Changes since 3.5.25 (20020504) |
| 31 | - driverfs additions |
| 32 | - copy_to/from_user() fixes [William Stinson] |
| 33 | - disable kiobufs support |
| 34 | |
| 35 | For a full changelog see http://www.torque.net/sg |
| 36 | |
| 37 | Map of SG verions to the Linux kernels in which they appear: |
| 38 | ---------- ---------------------------------- |
| 39 | original all kernels < 2.2.6 |
| 40 | 2.1.40 2.2.20 |
| 41 | 3.0.x optional version 3 sg driver for 2.2 series |
| 42 | 3.1.17++ 2.4.0++ |
| 43 | 3.5.23++ 2.5.0++ |
| 44 | |
| 45 | Major new features in SG 3.x driver (cf SG 2.x drivers) |
| 46 | - SG_IO ioctl() combines function if write() and read() |
| 47 | - new interface (sg_io_hdr_t) but still supports old interface |
| 48 | - scatter/gather in user space, direct IO, and mmap supported |
| 49 | |
| 50 | The normal action of this driver is to use the adapter (HBA) driver to DMA |
| 51 | data into kernel buffers and then use the CPU to copy the data into the |
| 52 | user space (vice versa for writes). That is called "indirect" IO due to |
| 53 | the double handling of data. There are two methods offered to remove the |
| 54 | redundant copy: 1) direct IO which uses the kernel kiobuf mechanism and |
| 55 | 2) using the mmap() system call to map the reserve buffer (this driver has |
| 56 | one reserve buffer per fd) into the user space. Both have their advantages. |
| 57 | In terms of absolute speed mmap() is faster. If speed is not a concern, |
| 58 | indirect IO should be fine. Read the documentation for more information. |
| 59 | |
| 60 | ** N.B. To use direct IO 'echo 1 > /proc/scsi/sg/allow_dio' may be |
| 61 | needed. That pseudo file's content is defaulted to 0. ** |
| 62 | |
| 63 | Historical note: this SCSI pass-through driver has been known as "sg" for |
| 64 | a decade. In broader kernel discussions "sg" is used to refer to scatter |
| 65 | gather techniques. The context should clarify which "sg" is referred to. |
| 66 | |
| 67 | Documentation |
| 68 | ============= |
| 69 | A web site for the SG device driver can be found at: |
| 70 | http://www.torque.net/sg [alternatively check the MAINTAINERS file] |
| 71 | The documentation for the sg version 3 driver can be found at: |
| 72 | http://www.torque.net/sg/p/sg_v3_ho.html |
| 73 | This is a rendering from DocBook source [change the extension to "sgml" |
| 74 | or "xml"]. There are renderings in "ps", "pdf", "rtf" and "txt" (soon). |
| 75 | |
| 76 | The older, version 2 documents discuss the original sg interface in detail: |
| 77 | http://www.torque.net/sg/p/scsi-generic.txt |
| 78 | http://www.torque.net/sg/p/scsi-generic_long.txt |
| 79 | A version of this document (potentially out of date) may also be found in |
| 80 | the kernel source tree, probably at: |
| 81 | Documentation/scsi/scsi-generic.txt . |
| 82 | |
| 83 | Utility and test programs are available at the sg web site. They are |
| 84 | bundled as sg_utils (for the lk 2.2 series) and sg3_utils (for the |
| 85 | lk 2.4 series). |
| 86 | |
| 87 | There is a HOWTO on the Linux SCSI subsystem in the lk 2.4 series at: |
| 88 | http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/SCSI-2.4-HOWTO |
| 89 | */ |
| 90 | |
| 91 | |
| 92 | /* New interface introduced in the 3.x SG drivers follows */ |
| 93 | |
| 94 | typedef struct sg_iovec /* same structure as used by readv() Linux system */ |
| 95 | { /* call. It defines one scatter-gather element. */ |
| 96 | void __user *iov_base; /* Starting address */ |
| 97 | size_t iov_len; /* Length in bytes */ |
| 98 | } sg_iovec_t; |
| 99 | |
| 100 | |
| 101 | typedef struct sg_io_hdr |
| 102 | { |
| 103 | int interface_id; /* [i] 'S' for SCSI generic (required) */ |
| 104 | int dxfer_direction; /* [i] data transfer direction */ |
| 105 | unsigned char cmd_len; /* [i] SCSI command length ( <= 16 bytes) */ |
| 106 | unsigned char mx_sb_len; /* [i] max length to write to sbp */ |
| 107 | unsigned short iovec_count; /* [i] 0 implies no scatter gather */ |
| 108 | unsigned int dxfer_len; /* [i] byte count of data transfer */ |
| 109 | void __user *dxferp; /* [i], [*io] points to data transfer memory |
| 110 | or scatter gather list */ |
| 111 | unsigned char __user *cmdp; /* [i], [*i] points to command to perform */ |
| 112 | void __user *sbp; /* [i], [*o] points to sense_buffer memory */ |
| 113 | unsigned int timeout; /* [i] MAX_UINT->no timeout (unit: millisec) */ |
| 114 | unsigned int flags; /* [i] 0 -> default, see SG_FLAG... */ |
| 115 | int pack_id; /* [i->o] unused internally (normally) */ |
| 116 | void __user * usr_ptr; /* [i->o] unused internally */ |
| 117 | unsigned char status; /* [o] scsi status */ |
| 118 | unsigned char masked_status;/* [o] shifted, masked scsi status */ |
| 119 | unsigned char msg_status; /* [o] messaging level data (optional) */ |
| 120 | unsigned char sb_len_wr; /* [o] byte count actually written to sbp */ |
| 121 | unsigned short host_status; /* [o] errors from host adapter */ |
| 122 | unsigned short driver_status;/* [o] errors from software driver */ |
| 123 | int resid; /* [o] dxfer_len - actual_transferred */ |
| 124 | unsigned int duration; /* [o] time taken by cmd (unit: millisec) */ |
| 125 | unsigned int info; /* [o] auxiliary information */ |
| 126 | } sg_io_hdr_t; /* 64 bytes long (on i386) */ |
| 127 | |
| 128 | #define SG_INTERFACE_ID_ORIG 'S' |
| 129 | |
| 130 | /* Use negative values to flag difference from original sg_header structure */ |
| 131 | #define SG_DXFER_NONE (-1) /* e.g. a SCSI Test Unit Ready command */ |
| 132 | #define SG_DXFER_TO_DEV (-2) /* e.g. a SCSI WRITE command */ |
| 133 | #define SG_DXFER_FROM_DEV (-3) /* e.g. a SCSI READ command */ |
| 134 | #define SG_DXFER_TO_FROM_DEV (-4) /* treated like SG_DXFER_FROM_DEV with the |
| 135 | additional property than during indirect |
| 136 | IO the user buffer is copied into the |
| 137 | kernel buffers before the transfer */ |
| 138 | #define SG_DXFER_UNKNOWN (-5) /* Unknown data direction */ |
| 139 | |
| 140 | /* following flag values can be "or"-ed together */ |
| 141 | #define SG_FLAG_DIRECT_IO 1 /* default is indirect IO */ |
| 142 | #define SG_FLAG_UNUSED_LUN_INHIBIT 2 /* default is overwrite lun in SCSI */ |
| 143 | /* command block (when <= SCSI_2) */ |
| 144 | #define SG_FLAG_MMAP_IO 4 /* request memory mapped IO */ |
| 145 | #define SG_FLAG_NO_DXFER 0x10000 /* no transfer of kernel buffers to/from */ |
| 146 | /* user space (debug indirect IO) */ |
| 147 | |
| 148 | /* following 'info' values are "or"-ed together */ |
| 149 | #define SG_INFO_OK_MASK 0x1 |
| 150 | #define SG_INFO_OK 0x0 /* no sense, host nor driver "noise" */ |
| 151 | #define SG_INFO_CHECK 0x1 /* something abnormal happened */ |
| 152 | |
| 153 | #define SG_INFO_DIRECT_IO_MASK 0x6 |
| 154 | #define SG_INFO_INDIRECT_IO 0x0 /* data xfer via kernel buffers (or no xfer) */ |
| 155 | #define SG_INFO_DIRECT_IO 0x2 /* direct IO requested and performed */ |
| 156 | #define SG_INFO_MIXED_IO 0x4 /* part direct, part indirect IO */ |
| 157 | |
| 158 | |
| 159 | typedef struct sg_scsi_id { /* used by SG_GET_SCSI_ID ioctl() */ |
| 160 | int host_no; /* as in "scsi<n>" where 'n' is one of 0, 1, 2 etc */ |
| 161 | int channel; |
| 162 | int scsi_id; /* scsi id of target device */ |
| 163 | int lun; |
| 164 | int scsi_type; /* TYPE_... defined in scsi/scsi.h */ |
| 165 | short h_cmd_per_lun;/* host (adapter) maximum commands per lun */ |
| 166 | short d_queue_depth;/* device (or adapter) maximum queue length */ |
| 167 | int unused[2]; /* probably find a good use, set 0 for now */ |
| 168 | } sg_scsi_id_t; /* 32 bytes long on i386 */ |
| 169 | |
| 170 | typedef struct sg_req_info { /* used by SG_GET_REQUEST_TABLE ioctl() */ |
| 171 | char req_state; /* 0 -> not used, 1 -> written, 2 -> ready to read */ |
| 172 | char orphan; /* 0 -> normal request, 1 -> from interruped SG_IO */ |
| 173 | char sg_io_owned; /* 0 -> complete with read(), 1 -> owned by SG_IO */ |
| 174 | char problem; /* 0 -> no problem detected, 1 -> error to report */ |
| 175 | int pack_id; /* pack_id associated with request */ |
| 176 | void __user *usr_ptr; /* user provided pointer (in new interface) */ |
| 177 | unsigned int duration; /* millisecs elapsed since written (req_state==1) |
| 178 | or request duration (req_state==2) */ |
| 179 | int unused; |
| 180 | } sg_req_info_t; /* 20 bytes long on i386 */ |
| 181 | |
| 182 | |
| 183 | /* IOCTLs: Those ioctls that are relevant to the SG 3.x drivers follow. |
| 184 | [Those that only apply to the SG 2.x drivers are at the end of the file.] |
| 185 | (_GET_s yield result via 'int *' 3rd argument unless otherwise indicated) */ |
| 186 | |
| 187 | #define SG_EMULATED_HOST 0x2203 /* true for emulated host adapter (ATAPI) */ |
| 188 | |
| 189 | /* Used to configure SCSI command transformation layer for ATAPI devices */ |
| 190 | /* Only supported by the ide-scsi driver */ |
| 191 | #define SG_SET_TRANSFORM 0x2204 /* N.B. 3rd arg is not pointer but value: */ |
| 192 | /* 3rd arg = 0 to disable transform, 1 to enable it */ |
| 193 | #define SG_GET_TRANSFORM 0x2205 |
| 194 | |
| 195 | #define SG_SET_RESERVED_SIZE 0x2275 /* request a new reserved buffer size */ |
| 196 | #define SG_GET_RESERVED_SIZE 0x2272 /* actual size of reserved buffer */ |
| 197 | |
| 198 | /* The following ioctl has a 'sg_scsi_id_t *' object as its 3rd argument. */ |
| 199 | #define SG_GET_SCSI_ID 0x2276 /* Yields fd's bus, chan, dev, lun + type */ |
| 200 | /* SCSI id information can also be obtained from SCSI_IOCTL_GET_IDLUN */ |
| 201 | |
| 202 | /* Override host setting and always DMA using low memory ( <16MB on i386) */ |
| 203 | #define SG_SET_FORCE_LOW_DMA 0x2279 /* 0-> use adapter setting, 1-> force */ |
| 204 | #define SG_GET_LOW_DMA 0x227a /* 0-> use all ram for dma; 1-> low dma ram */ |
| 205 | |
| 206 | /* When SG_SET_FORCE_PACK_ID set to 1, pack_id is input to read() which |
| 207 | tries to fetch a packet with a matching pack_id, waits, or returns EAGAIN. |
| 208 | If pack_id is -1 then read oldest waiting. When ...FORCE_PACK_ID set to 0 |
| 209 | then pack_id ignored by read() and oldest readable fetched. */ |
| 210 | #define SG_SET_FORCE_PACK_ID 0x227b |
| 211 | #define SG_GET_PACK_ID 0x227c /* Yields oldest readable pack_id (or -1) */ |
| 212 | |
| 213 | #define SG_GET_NUM_WAITING 0x227d /* Number of commands awaiting read() */ |
| 214 | |
| 215 | /* Yields max scatter gather tablesize allowed by current host adapter */ |
| 216 | #define SG_GET_SG_TABLESIZE 0x227F /* 0 implies can't do scatter gather */ |
| 217 | |
| 218 | #define SG_GET_VERSION_NUM 0x2282 /* Example: version 2.1.34 yields 20134 */ |
| 219 | |
| 220 | /* Returns -EBUSY if occupied. 3rd argument pointer to int (see next) */ |
| 221 | #define SG_SCSI_RESET 0x2284 |
| 222 | /* Associated values that can be given to SG_SCSI_RESET follow */ |
| 223 | #define SG_SCSI_RESET_NOTHING 0 |
| 224 | #define SG_SCSI_RESET_DEVICE 1 |
| 225 | #define SG_SCSI_RESET_BUS 2 |
| 226 | #define SG_SCSI_RESET_HOST 3 |
| 227 | |
| 228 | /* synchronous SCSI command ioctl, (only in version 3 interface) */ |
| 229 | #define SG_IO 0x2285 /* similar effect as write() followed by read() */ |
| 230 | |
| 231 | #define SG_GET_REQUEST_TABLE 0x2286 /* yields table of active requests */ |
| 232 | |
| 233 | /* How to treat EINTR during SG_IO ioctl(), only in SG 3.x series */ |
| 234 | #define SG_SET_KEEP_ORPHAN 0x2287 /* 1 -> hold for read(), 0 -> drop (def) */ |
| 235 | #define SG_GET_KEEP_ORPHAN 0x2288 |
| 236 | |
| 237 | /* yields scsi midlevel's access_count for this SCSI device */ |
| 238 | #define SG_GET_ACCESS_COUNT 0x2289 |
| 239 | |
| 240 | |
| 241 | #define SG_SCATTER_SZ (8 * 4096) /* PAGE_SIZE not available to user */ |
| 242 | /* Largest size (in bytes) a single scatter-gather list element can have. |
| 243 | The value must be a power of 2 and <= (PAGE_SIZE * 32) [131072 bytes on |
| 244 | i386]. The minimum value is PAGE_SIZE. If scatter-gather not supported |
| 245 | by adapter then this value is the largest data block that can be |
| 246 | read/written by a single scsi command. The user can find the value of |
| 247 | PAGE_SIZE by calling getpagesize() defined in unistd.h . */ |
| 248 | |
| 249 | #define SG_DEFAULT_RETRIES 0 |
| 250 | |
| 251 | /* Defaults, commented if they differ from original sg driver */ |
| 252 | #define SG_DEF_FORCE_LOW_DMA 0 /* was 1 -> memory below 16MB on i386 */ |
| 253 | #define SG_DEF_FORCE_PACK_ID 0 |
| 254 | #define SG_DEF_KEEP_ORPHAN 0 |
| 255 | #define SG_DEF_RESERVED_SIZE SG_SCATTER_SZ /* load time option */ |
| 256 | |
| 257 | /* maximum outstanding requests, write() yields EDOM if exceeded */ |
| 258 | #define SG_MAX_QUEUE 16 |
| 259 | |
| 260 | #define SG_BIG_BUFF SG_DEF_RESERVED_SIZE /* for backward compatibility */ |
| 261 | |
| 262 | /* Alternate style type names, "..._t" variants preferred */ |
| 263 | typedef struct sg_io_hdr Sg_io_hdr; |
| 264 | typedef struct sg_io_vec Sg_io_vec; |
| 265 | typedef struct sg_scsi_id Sg_scsi_id; |
| 266 | typedef struct sg_req_info Sg_req_info; |
| 267 | |
| 268 | |
| 269 | /* vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv */ |
| 270 | /* The older SG interface based on the 'sg_header' structure follows. */ |
| 271 | /* ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ */ |
| 272 | |
| 273 | #define SG_MAX_SENSE 16 /* this only applies to the sg_header interface */ |
| 274 | |
| 275 | struct sg_header |
| 276 | { |
| 277 | int pack_len; /* [o] reply_len (ie useless), ignored as input */ |
| 278 | int reply_len; /* [i] max length of expected reply (inc. sg_header) */ |
| 279 | int pack_id; /* [io] id number of packet (use ints >= 0) */ |
| 280 | int result; /* [o] 0==ok, else (+ve) Unix errno (best ignored) */ |
| 281 | unsigned int twelve_byte:1; |
| 282 | /* [i] Force 12 byte command length for group 6 & 7 commands */ |
| 283 | unsigned int target_status:5; /* [o] scsi status from target */ |
| 284 | unsigned int host_status:8; /* [o] host status (see "DID" codes) */ |
| 285 | unsigned int driver_status:8; /* [o] driver status+suggestion */ |
| 286 | unsigned int other_flags:10; /* unused */ |
| 287 | unsigned char sense_buffer[SG_MAX_SENSE]; /* [o] Output in 3 cases: |
| 288 | when target_status is CHECK_CONDITION or |
| 289 | when target_status is COMMAND_TERMINATED or |
| 290 | when (driver_status & DRIVER_SENSE) is true. */ |
| 291 | }; /* This structure is 36 bytes long on i386 */ |
| 292 | |
| 293 | |
| 294 | /* IOCTLs: The following are not required (or ignored) when the sg_io_hdr_t |
| 295 | interface is used. They are kept for backward compatibility with |
| 296 | the original and version 2 drivers. */ |
| 297 | |
| 298 | #define SG_SET_TIMEOUT 0x2201 /* unit: jiffies (10ms on i386) */ |
| 299 | #define SG_GET_TIMEOUT 0x2202 /* yield timeout as _return_ value */ |
| 300 | |
| 301 | /* Get/set command queuing state per fd (default is SG_DEF_COMMAND_Q. |
| 302 | Each time a sg_io_hdr_t object is seen on this file descriptor, this |
| 303 | command queuing flag is set on (overriding the previous setting). */ |
| 304 | #define SG_GET_COMMAND_Q 0x2270 /* Yields 0 (queuing off) or 1 (on) */ |
| 305 | #define SG_SET_COMMAND_Q 0x2271 /* Change queuing state with 0 or 1 */ |
| 306 | |
| 307 | /* Turn on/off error sense trace (1 and 0 respectively, default is off). |
| 308 | Try using: "# cat /proc/scsi/sg/debug" instead in the v3 driver */ |
| 309 | #define SG_SET_DEBUG 0x227e /* 0 -> turn off debug */ |
| 310 | |
| 311 | #define SG_NEXT_CMD_LEN 0x2283 /* override SCSI command length with given |
| 312 | number on the next write() on this file descriptor */ |
| 313 | |
| 314 | |
| 315 | /* Defaults, commented if they differ from original sg driver */ |
| 316 | #ifdef __KERNEL__ |
| 317 | #define SG_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT_USER (60*USER_HZ) /* HZ == 'jiffies in 1 second' */ |
| 318 | #else |
| 319 | #define SG_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT (60*HZ) /* HZ == 'jiffies in 1 second' */ |
| 320 | #endif |
| 321 | |
| 322 | #define SG_DEF_COMMAND_Q 0 /* command queuing is always on when |
| 323 | the new interface is used */ |
| 324 | #define SG_DEF_UNDERRUN_FLAG 0 |
| 325 | |
| 326 | #endif |