| /* |
| * seagate.c Copyright (C) 1992, 1993 Drew Eckhardt |
| * low level scsi driver for ST01/ST02, Future Domain TMC-885, |
| * TMC-950 by Drew Eckhardt <drew@colorado.edu> |
| * |
| * Note : TMC-880 boards don't work because they have two bits in |
| * the status register flipped, I'll fix this "RSN" |
| * [why do I have strong feeling that above message is from 1993? :-) |
| * pavel@ucw.cz] |
| * |
| * This card does all the I/O via memory mapped I/O, so there is no need |
| * to check or allocate a region of the I/O address space. |
| */ |
| |
| /* 1996 - to use new read{b,w,l}, write{b,w,l}, and phys_to_virt |
| * macros, replaced assembler routines with C. There's probably a |
| * performance hit, but I only have a cdrom and can't tell. Define |
| * SEAGATE_USE_ASM if you want the old assembler code -- SJT |
| * |
| * 1998-jul-29 - created DPRINTK macros and made it work under |
| * linux 2.1.112, simplified some #defines etc. <pavel@ucw.cz> |
| * |
| * Aug 2000 - aeb - deleted seagate_st0x_biosparam(). It would try to |
| * read the physical disk geometry, a bad mistake. Of course it doesn't |
| * matter much what geometry one invents, but on large disks it |
| * returned 256 (or more) heads, causing all kind of failures. |
| * Of course this means that people might see a different geometry now, |
| * so boot parameters may be necessary in some cases. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Configuration : |
| * To use without BIOS -DOVERRIDE=base_address -DCONTROLLER=FD or SEAGATE |
| * -DIRQ will override the default of 5. |
| * Note: You can now set these options from the kernel's "command line". |
| * The syntax is: |
| * |
| * st0x=ADDRESS,IRQ (for a Seagate controller) |
| * or: |
| * tmc8xx=ADDRESS,IRQ (for a TMC-8xx or TMC-950 controller) |
| * eg: |
| * tmc8xx=0xC8000,15 |
| * |
| * will configure the driver for a TMC-8xx style controller using IRQ 15 |
| * with a base address of 0xC8000. |
| * |
| * -DARBITRATE |
| * Will cause the host adapter to arbitrate for the |
| * bus for better SCSI-II compatibility, rather than just |
| * waiting for BUS FREE and then doing its thing. Should |
| * let us do one command per Lun when I integrate my |
| * reorganization changes into the distribution sources. |
| * |
| * -DDEBUG=65535 |
| * Will activate debug code. |
| * |
| * -DFAST or -DFAST32 |
| * Will use blind transfers where possible |
| * |
| * -DPARITY |
| * This will enable parity. |
| * |
| * -DSEAGATE_USE_ASM |
| * Will use older seagate assembly code. should be (very small amount) |
| * Faster. |
| * |
| * -DSLOW_RATE=50 |
| * Will allow compatibility with broken devices that don't |
| * handshake fast enough (ie, some CD ROM's) for the Seagate |
| * code. |
| * |
| * 50 is some number, It will let you specify a default |
| * transfer rate if handshaking isn't working correctly. |
| * |
| * -DOLDCNTDATASCEME There is a new sceme to set the CONTROL |
| * and DATA reigsters which complies more closely |
| * with the SCSI2 standard. This hopefully eliminates |
| * the need to swap the order these registers are |
| * 'messed' with. It makes the following two options |
| * obsolete. To reenable the old sceme define this. |
| * |
| * The following to options are patches from the SCSI.HOWTO |
| * |
| * -DSWAPSTAT This will swap the definitions for STAT_MSG and STAT_CD. |
| * |
| * -DSWAPCNTDATA This will swap the order that seagate.c messes with |
| * the CONTROL an DATA registers. |
| */ |
| |
| #include <linux/module.h> |
| #include <linux/interrupt.h> |
| #include <linux/spinlock.h> |
| #include <linux/signal.h> |
| #include <linux/string.h> |
| #include <linux/proc_fs.h> |
| #include <linux/init.h> |
| #include <linux/delay.h> |
| #include <linux/blkdev.h> |
| #include <linux/stat.h> |
| #include <linux/delay.h> |
| |
| #include <asm/io.h> |
| #include <asm/system.h> |
| #include <asm/uaccess.h> |
| |
| #include "scsi.h" |
| #include <scsi/scsi_dbg.h> |
| #include <scsi/scsi_host.h> |
| #include "seagate.h" |
| |
| #include <scsi/scsi_ioctl.h> |
| |
| #ifdef DEBUG |
| #define DPRINTK( when, msg... ) do { if ( (DEBUG & (when)) == (when) ) printk( msg ); } while (0) |
| #else |
| #define DPRINTK( when, msg... ) do { } while (0) |
| #endif |
| #define DANY( msg... ) DPRINTK( 0xffff, msg ); |
| |
| #ifndef IRQ |
| #define IRQ 5 |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef FAST32 |
| #define FAST |
| #endif |
| |
| #undef LINKED /* Linked commands are currently broken! */ |
| |
| #if defined(OVERRIDE) && !defined(CONTROLLER) |
| #error Please use -DCONTROLLER=SEAGATE or -DCONTROLLER=FD to override controller type |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifndef __i386__ |
| #undef SEAGATE_USE_ASM |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| Thanks to Brian Antoine for the example code in his Messy-Loss ST-01 |
| driver, and Mitsugu Suzuki for information on the ST-01 |
| SCSI host. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| CONTROL defines |
| */ |
| |
| #define CMD_RST 0x01 |
| #define CMD_SEL 0x02 |
| #define CMD_BSY 0x04 |
| #define CMD_ATTN 0x08 |
| #define CMD_START_ARB 0x10 |
| #define CMD_EN_PARITY 0x20 |
| #define CMD_INTR 0x40 |
| #define CMD_DRVR_ENABLE 0x80 |
| |
| /* |
| STATUS |
| */ |
| #ifdef SWAPSTAT |
| #define STAT_MSG 0x08 |
| #define STAT_CD 0x02 |
| #else |
| #define STAT_MSG 0x02 |
| #define STAT_CD 0x08 |
| #endif |
| |
| #define STAT_BSY 0x01 |
| #define STAT_IO 0x04 |
| #define STAT_REQ 0x10 |
| #define STAT_SEL 0x20 |
| #define STAT_PARITY 0x40 |
| #define STAT_ARB_CMPL 0x80 |
| |
| /* |
| REQUESTS |
| */ |
| |
| #define REQ_MASK (STAT_CD | STAT_IO | STAT_MSG) |
| #define REQ_DATAOUT 0 |
| #define REQ_DATAIN STAT_IO |
| #define REQ_CMDOUT STAT_CD |
| #define REQ_STATIN (STAT_CD | STAT_IO) |
| #define REQ_MSGOUT (STAT_MSG | STAT_CD) |
| #define REQ_MSGIN (STAT_MSG | STAT_CD | STAT_IO) |
| |
| extern volatile int seagate_st0x_timeout; |
| |
| #ifdef PARITY |
| #define BASE_CMD CMD_EN_PARITY |
| #else |
| #define BASE_CMD 0 |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| Debugging code |
| */ |
| |
| #define PHASE_BUS_FREE 1 |
| #define PHASE_ARBITRATION 2 |
| #define PHASE_SELECTION 4 |
| #define PHASE_DATAIN 8 |
| #define PHASE_DATAOUT 0x10 |
| #define PHASE_CMDOUT 0x20 |
| #define PHASE_MSGIN 0x40 |
| #define PHASE_MSGOUT 0x80 |
| #define PHASE_STATUSIN 0x100 |
| #define PHASE_ETC (PHASE_DATAIN | PHASE_DATAOUT | PHASE_CMDOUT | PHASE_MSGIN | PHASE_MSGOUT | PHASE_STATUSIN) |
| #define PRINT_COMMAND 0x200 |
| #define PHASE_EXIT 0x400 |
| #define PHASE_RESELECT 0x800 |
| #define DEBUG_FAST 0x1000 |
| #define DEBUG_SG 0x2000 |
| #define DEBUG_LINKED 0x4000 |
| #define DEBUG_BORKEN 0x8000 |
| |
| /* |
| * Control options - these are timeouts specified in .01 seconds. |
| */ |
| |
| /* 30, 20 work */ |
| #define ST0X_BUS_FREE_DELAY 25 |
| #define ST0X_SELECTION_DELAY 25 |
| |
| #define SEAGATE 1 /* these determine the type of the controller */ |
| #define FD 2 |
| |
| #define ST0X_ID_STR "Seagate ST-01/ST-02" |
| #define FD_ID_STR "TMC-8XX/TMC-950" |
| |
| static int internal_command (unsigned char target, unsigned char lun, |
| const void *cmnd, |
| void *buff, int bufflen, int reselect); |
| |
| static int incommand; /* set if arbitration has finished |
| and we are in some command phase. */ |
| |
| static unsigned int base_address = 0; /* Where the card ROM starts, used to |
| calculate memory mapped register |
| location. */ |
| |
| static void __iomem *st0x_cr_sr; /* control register write, status |
| register read. 256 bytes in |
| length. |
| Read is status of SCSI BUS, as per |
| STAT masks. */ |
| |
| static void __iomem *st0x_dr; /* data register, read write 256 |
| bytes in length. */ |
| |
| static volatile int st0x_aborted = 0; /* set when we are aborted, ie by a |
| time out, etc. */ |
| |
| static unsigned char controller_type = 0; /* set to SEAGATE for ST0x |
| boards or FD for TMC-8xx |
| boards */ |
| static int irq = IRQ; |
| |
| module_param(base_address, uint, 0); |
| module_param(controller_type, byte, 0); |
| module_param(irq, int, 0); |
| MODULE_LICENSE("GPL"); |
| |
| |
| #define retcode(result) (((result) << 16) | (message << 8) | status) |
| #define STATUS ((u8) readb(st0x_cr_sr)) |
| #define DATA ((u8) readb(st0x_dr)) |
| #define WRITE_CONTROL(d) { writeb((d), st0x_cr_sr); } |
| #define WRITE_DATA(d) { writeb((d), st0x_dr); } |
| |
| #ifndef OVERRIDE |
| static unsigned int seagate_bases[] = { |
| 0xc8000, 0xca000, 0xcc000, |
| 0xce000, 0xdc000, 0xde000 |
| }; |
| |
| typedef struct { |
| const unsigned char *signature; |
| unsigned offset; |
| unsigned length; |
| unsigned char type; |
| } Signature; |
| |
| static Signature __initdata signatures[] = { |
| {"ST01 v1.7 (C) Copyright 1987 Seagate", 15, 37, SEAGATE}, |
| {"SCSI BIOS 2.00 (C) Copyright 1987 Seagate", 15, 40, SEAGATE}, |
| |
| /* |
| * The following two lines are NOT mistakes. One detects ROM revision |
| * 3.0.0, the other 3.2. Since seagate has only one type of SCSI adapter, |
| * and this is not going to change, the "SEAGATE" and "SCSI" together |
| * are probably "good enough" |
| */ |
| |
| {"SEAGATE SCSI BIOS ", 16, 17, SEAGATE}, |
| {"SEAGATE SCSI BIOS ", 17, 17, SEAGATE}, |
| |
| /* |
| * However, future domain makes several incompatible SCSI boards, so specific |
| * signatures must be used. |
| */ |
| |
| {"FUTURE DOMAIN CORP. (C) 1986-1989 V5.0C2/14/89", 5, 46, FD}, |
| {"FUTURE DOMAIN CORP. (C) 1986-1989 V6.0A7/28/89", 5, 46, FD}, |
| {"FUTURE DOMAIN CORP. (C) 1986-1990 V6.0105/31/90", 5, 47, FD}, |
| {"FUTURE DOMAIN CORP. (C) 1986-1990 V6.0209/18/90", 5, 47, FD}, |
| {"FUTURE DOMAIN CORP. (C) 1986-1990 V7.009/18/90", 5, 46, FD}, |
| {"FUTURE DOMAIN CORP. (C) 1992 V8.00.004/02/92", 5, 44, FD}, |
| {"IBM F1 BIOS V1.1004/30/92", 5, 25, FD}, |
| {"FUTURE DOMAIN TMC-950", 5, 21, FD}, |
| /* Added for 2.2.16 by Matthias_Heidbrink@b.maus.de */ |
| {"IBM F1 V1.2009/22/93", 5, 25, FD}, |
| }; |
| |
| #define NUM_SIGNATURES (sizeof(signatures) / sizeof(Signature)) |
| #endif /* n OVERRIDE */ |
| |
| /* |
| * hostno stores the hostnumber, as told to us by the init routine. |
| */ |
| |
| static int hostno = -1; |
| static void seagate_reconnect_intr (int, void *, struct pt_regs *); |
| static irqreturn_t do_seagate_reconnect_intr (int, void *, struct pt_regs *); |
| |
| #ifdef FAST |
| static int fast = 1; |
| #else |
| #define fast 0 |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef SLOW_RATE |
| /* |
| * Support for broken devices : |
| * The Seagate board has a handshaking problem. Namely, a lack |
| * thereof for slow devices. You can blast 600K/second through |
| * it if you are polling for each byte, more if you do a blind |
| * transfer. In the first case, with a fast device, REQ will |
| * transition high-low or high-low-high before your loop restarts |
| * and you'll have no problems. In the second case, the board |
| * will insert wait states for up to 13.2 usecs for REQ to |
| * transition low->high, and everything will work. |
| * |
| * However, there's nothing in the state machine that says |
| * you *HAVE* to see a high-low-high set of transitions before |
| * sending the next byte, and slow things like the Trantor CD ROMS |
| * will break because of this. |
| * |
| * So, we need to slow things down, which isn't as simple as it |
| * seems. We can't slow things down period, because then people |
| * who don't recompile their kernels will shoot me for ruining |
| * their performance. We need to do it on a case per case basis. |
| * |
| * The best for performance will be to, only for borken devices |
| * (this is stored on a per-target basis in the scsi_devices array) |
| * |
| * Wait for a low->high transition before continuing with that |
| * transfer. If we timeout, continue anyways. We don't need |
| * a long timeout, because REQ should only be asserted until the |
| * corresponding ACK is received and processed. |
| * |
| * Note that we can't use the system timer for this, because of |
| * resolution, and we *really* can't use the timer chip since |
| * gettimeofday() and the beeper routines use that. So, |
| * the best thing for us to do will be to calibrate a timing |
| * loop in the initialization code using the timer chip before |
| * gettimeofday() can screw with it. |
| * |
| * FIXME: this is broken (not borken :-). Empty loop costs less than |
| * loop with ISA access in it! -- pavel@ucw.cz |
| */ |
| |
| static int borken_calibration = 0; |
| |
| static void __init borken_init (void) |
| { |
| register int count = 0, start = jiffies + 1, stop = start + 25; |
| |
| /* FIXME: There may be a better approach, this is a straight port for |
| now */ |
| preempt_disable(); |
| while (time_before (jiffies, start)) |
| cpu_relax(); |
| for (; time_before (jiffies, stop); ++count) |
| cpu_relax(); |
| preempt_enable(); |
| |
| /* |
| * Ok, we now have a count for .25 seconds. Convert to a |
| * count per second and divide by transfer rate in K. */ |
| |
| borken_calibration = (count * 4) / (SLOW_RATE * 1024); |
| |
| if (borken_calibration < 1) |
| borken_calibration = 1; |
| } |
| |
| static inline void borken_wait (void) |
| { |
| register int count; |
| |
| for (count = borken_calibration; count && (STATUS & STAT_REQ); --count) |
| cpu_relax(); |
| |
| #if (DEBUG & DEBUG_BORKEN) |
| if (count) |
| printk ("scsi%d : borken timeout\n", hostno); |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| #endif /* def SLOW_RATE */ |
| |
| /* These beasts only live on ISA, and ISA means 8MHz. Each ULOOP() |
| * contains at least one ISA access, which takes more than 0.125 |
| * usec. So if we loop 8 times time in usec, we are safe. |
| */ |
| |
| #define ULOOP( i ) for (clock = i*8;;) |
| #define TIMEOUT (!(clock--)) |
| |
| int __init seagate_st0x_detect (struct scsi_host_template * tpnt) |
| { |
| struct Scsi_Host *instance; |
| int i, j; |
| unsigned long cr, dr; |
| |
| tpnt->proc_name = "seagate"; |
| /* |
| * First, we try for the manual override. |
| */ |
| DANY ("Autodetecting ST0x / TMC-8xx\n"); |
| |
| if (hostno != -1) { |
| printk (KERN_ERR "seagate_st0x_detect() called twice?!\n"); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* If the user specified the controller type from the command line, |
| controller_type will be non-zero, so don't try to detect one */ |
| |
| if (!controller_type) { |
| #ifdef OVERRIDE |
| base_address = OVERRIDE; |
| controller_type = CONTROLLER; |
| |
| DANY ("Base address overridden to %x, controller type is %s\n", |
| base_address, |
| controller_type == SEAGATE ? "SEAGATE" : "FD"); |
| #else /* OVERRIDE */ |
| /* |
| * To detect this card, we simply look for the signature |
| * from the BIOS version notice in all the possible locations |
| * of the ROM's. This has a nice side effect of not trashing |
| * any register locations that might be used by something else. |
| * |
| * XXX - note that we probably should be probing the address |
| * space for the on-board RAM instead. |
| */ |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < (sizeof (seagate_bases) / sizeof (unsigned int)); ++i) { |
| void __iomem *p = ioremap(seagate_bases[i], 0x2000); |
| if (!p) |
| continue; |
| for (j = 0; j < NUM_SIGNATURES; ++j) |
| if (check_signature(p + signatures[j].offset, signatures[j].signature, signatures[j].length)) { |
| base_address = seagate_bases[i]; |
| controller_type = signatures[j].type; |
| break; |
| } |
| iounmap(p); |
| } |
| #endif /* OVERRIDE */ |
| } |
| /* (! controller_type) */ |
| tpnt->this_id = (controller_type == SEAGATE) ? 7 : 6; |
| tpnt->name = (controller_type == SEAGATE) ? ST0X_ID_STR : FD_ID_STR; |
| |
| if (!base_address) { |
| printk(KERN_INFO "seagate: ST0x/TMC-8xx not detected.\n"); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| cr = base_address + (controller_type == SEAGATE ? 0x1a00 : 0x1c00); |
| dr = cr + 0x200; |
| st0x_cr_sr = ioremap(cr, 0x100); |
| st0x_dr = ioremap(dr, 0x100); |
| |
| DANY("%s detected. Base address = %x, cr = %x, dr = %x\n", |
| tpnt->name, base_address, cr, dr); |
| |
| /* |
| * At all times, we will use IRQ 5. Should also check for IRQ3 |
| * if we lose our first interrupt. |
| */ |
| instance = scsi_register (tpnt, 0); |
| if (instance == NULL) |
| return 0; |
| |
| hostno = instance->host_no; |
| if (request_irq (irq, do_seagate_reconnect_intr, SA_INTERRUPT, (controller_type == SEAGATE) ? "seagate" : "tmc-8xx", instance)) { |
| printk(KERN_ERR "scsi%d : unable to allocate IRQ%d\n", hostno, irq); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| instance->irq = irq; |
| instance->io_port = base_address; |
| #ifdef SLOW_RATE |
| printk(KERN_INFO "Calibrating borken timer... "); |
| borken_init(); |
| printk(" %d cycles per transfer\n", borken_calibration); |
| #endif |
| printk (KERN_INFO "This is one second... "); |
| { |
| int clock; |
| ULOOP (1 * 1000 * 1000) { |
| STATUS; |
| if (TIMEOUT) |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| printk ("done, %s options:" |
| #ifdef ARBITRATE |
| " ARBITRATE" |
| #endif |
| #ifdef DEBUG |
| " DEBUG" |
| #endif |
| #ifdef FAST |
| " FAST" |
| #ifdef FAST32 |
| "32" |
| #endif |
| #endif |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| " LINKED" |
| #endif |
| #ifdef PARITY |
| " PARITY" |
| #endif |
| #ifdef SEAGATE_USE_ASM |
| " SEAGATE_USE_ASM" |
| #endif |
| #ifdef SLOW_RATE |
| " SLOW_RATE" |
| #endif |
| #ifdef SWAPSTAT |
| " SWAPSTAT" |
| #endif |
| #ifdef SWAPCNTDATA |
| " SWAPCNTDATA" |
| #endif |
| "\n", tpnt->name); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| static const char *seagate_st0x_info (struct Scsi_Host *shpnt) |
| { |
| static char buffer[64]; |
| |
| snprintf(buffer, 64, "%s at irq %d, address 0x%05X", |
| (controller_type == SEAGATE) ? ST0X_ID_STR : FD_ID_STR, |
| irq, base_address); |
| return buffer; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * These are our saved pointers for the outstanding command that is |
| * waiting for a reconnect |
| */ |
| |
| static unsigned char current_target, current_lun; |
| static unsigned char *current_cmnd, *current_data; |
| static int current_nobuffs; |
| static struct scatterlist *current_buffer; |
| static int current_bufflen; |
| |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| /* |
| * linked_connected indicates whether or not we are currently connected to |
| * linked_target, linked_lun and in an INFORMATION TRANSFER phase, |
| * using linked commands. |
| */ |
| |
| static int linked_connected = 0; |
| static unsigned char linked_target, linked_lun; |
| #endif |
| |
| static void (*done_fn) (Scsi_Cmnd *) = NULL; |
| static Scsi_Cmnd *SCint = NULL; |
| |
| /* |
| * These control whether or not disconnect / reconnect will be attempted, |
| * or are being attempted. |
| */ |
| |
| #define NO_RECONNECT 0 |
| #define RECONNECT_NOW 1 |
| #define CAN_RECONNECT 2 |
| |
| /* |
| * LINKED_RIGHT indicates that we are currently connected to the correct target |
| * for this command, LINKED_WRONG indicates that we are connected to the wrong |
| * target. Note that these imply CAN_RECONNECT and require defined(LINKED). |
| */ |
| |
| #define LINKED_RIGHT 3 |
| #define LINKED_WRONG 4 |
| |
| /* |
| * This determines if we are expecting to reconnect or not. |
| */ |
| |
| static int should_reconnect = 0; |
| |
| /* |
| * The seagate_reconnect_intr routine is called when a target reselects the |
| * host adapter. This occurs on the interrupt triggered by the target |
| * asserting SEL. |
| */ |
| |
| static irqreturn_t do_seagate_reconnect_intr(int irq, void *dev_id, |
| struct pt_regs *regs) |
| { |
| unsigned long flags; |
| struct Scsi_Host *dev = dev_id; |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave (dev->host_lock, flags); |
| seagate_reconnect_intr (irq, dev_id, regs); |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore (dev->host_lock, flags); |
| return IRQ_HANDLED; |
| } |
| |
| static void seagate_reconnect_intr (int irq, void *dev_id, struct pt_regs *regs) |
| { |
| int temp; |
| Scsi_Cmnd *SCtmp; |
| |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_RESELECT, "scsi%d : seagate_reconnect_intr() called\n", hostno); |
| |
| if (!should_reconnect) |
| printk(KERN_WARNING "scsi%d: unexpected interrupt.\n", hostno); |
| else { |
| should_reconnect = 0; |
| |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_RESELECT, "scsi%d : internal_command(%d, %08x, %08x, RECONNECT_NOW\n", |
| hostno, current_target, current_data, current_bufflen); |
| |
| temp = internal_command (current_target, current_lun, current_cmnd, current_data, current_bufflen, RECONNECT_NOW); |
| |
| if (msg_byte(temp) != DISCONNECT) { |
| if (done_fn) { |
| DPRINTK(PHASE_RESELECT, "scsi%d : done_fn(%d,%08x)", hostno, hostno, temp); |
| if (!SCint) |
| panic ("SCint == NULL in seagate"); |
| SCtmp = SCint; |
| SCint = NULL; |
| SCtmp->result = temp; |
| done_fn(SCtmp); |
| } else |
| printk(KERN_ERR "done_fn() not defined.\n"); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * The seagate_st0x_queue_command() function provides a queued interface |
| * to the seagate SCSI driver. Basically, it just passes control onto the |
| * seagate_command() function, after fixing it so that the done_fn() |
| * is set to the one passed to the function. We have to be very careful, |
| * because there are some commands on some devices that do not disconnect, |
| * and if we simply call the done_fn when the command is done then another |
| * command is started and queue_command is called again... We end up |
| * overflowing the kernel stack, and this tends not to be such a good idea. |
| */ |
| |
| static int recursion_depth = 0; |
| |
| static int seagate_st0x_queue_command (Scsi_Cmnd * SCpnt, void (*done) (Scsi_Cmnd *)) |
| { |
| int result, reconnect; |
| Scsi_Cmnd *SCtmp; |
| |
| DANY ("seagate: que_command"); |
| done_fn = done; |
| current_target = SCpnt->device->id; |
| current_lun = SCpnt->device->lun; |
| current_cmnd = SCpnt->cmnd; |
| current_data = (unsigned char *) SCpnt->request_buffer; |
| current_bufflen = SCpnt->request_bufflen; |
| SCint = SCpnt; |
| if (recursion_depth) |
| return 1; |
| recursion_depth++; |
| do { |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| /* |
| * Set linked command bit in control field of SCSI command. |
| */ |
| |
| current_cmnd[SCpnt->cmd_len] |= 0x01; |
| if (linked_connected) { |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_LINKED, "scsi%d : using linked commands, current I_T_L nexus is ", hostno); |
| if (linked_target == current_target && linked_lun == current_lun) |
| { |
| DPRINTK(DEBUG_LINKED, "correct\n"); |
| reconnect = LINKED_RIGHT; |
| } else { |
| DPRINTK(DEBUG_LINKED, "incorrect\n"); |
| reconnect = LINKED_WRONG; |
| } |
| } else |
| #endif /* LINKED */ |
| reconnect = CAN_RECONNECT; |
| |
| result = internal_command(SCint->device->id, SCint->device->lun, SCint->cmnd, |
| SCint->request_buffer, SCint->request_bufflen, reconnect); |
| if (msg_byte(result) == DISCONNECT) |
| break; |
| SCtmp = SCint; |
| SCint = NULL; |
| SCtmp->result = result; |
| done_fn(SCtmp); |
| } |
| while (SCint); |
| recursion_depth--; |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| static int internal_command (unsigned char target, unsigned char lun, |
| const void *cmnd, void *buff, int bufflen, int reselect) |
| { |
| unsigned char *data = NULL; |
| struct scatterlist *buffer = NULL; |
| int clock, temp, nobuffs = 0, done = 0, len = 0; |
| #ifdef DEBUG |
| int transfered = 0, phase = 0, newphase; |
| #endif |
| register unsigned char status_read; |
| unsigned char tmp_data, tmp_control, status = 0, message = 0; |
| unsigned transfersize = 0, underflow = 0; |
| #ifdef SLOW_RATE |
| int borken = (int) SCint->device->borken; /* Does the current target require |
| Very Slow I/O ? */ |
| #endif |
| |
| incommand = 0; |
| st0x_aborted = 0; |
| |
| #if (DEBUG & PRINT_COMMAND) |
| printk("scsi%d : target = %d, command = ", hostno, target); |
| __scsi_print_command((unsigned char *) cmnd); |
| #endif |
| |
| #if (DEBUG & PHASE_RESELECT) |
| switch (reselect) { |
| case RECONNECT_NOW: |
| printk("scsi%d : reconnecting\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| case LINKED_RIGHT: |
| printk("scsi%d : connected, can reconnect\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| case LINKED_WRONG: |
| printk("scsi%d : connected to wrong target, can reconnect\n", |
| hostno); |
| break; |
| #endif |
| case CAN_RECONNECT: |
| printk("scsi%d : allowed to reconnect\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| default: |
| printk("scsi%d : not allowed to reconnect\n", hostno); |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| if (target == (controller_type == SEAGATE ? 7 : 6)) |
| return DID_BAD_TARGET; |
| |
| /* |
| * We work it differently depending on if this is is "the first time," |
| * or a reconnect. If this is a reselect phase, then SEL will |
| * be asserted, and we must skip selection / arbitration phases. |
| */ |
| |
| switch (reselect) { |
| case RECONNECT_NOW: |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_RESELECT, "scsi%d : phase RESELECT \n", hostno); |
| /* |
| * At this point, we should find the logical or of our ID |
| * and the original target's ID on the BUS, with BSY, SEL, |
| * and I/O signals asserted. |
| * |
| * After ARBITRATION phase is completed, only SEL, BSY, |
| * and the target ID are asserted. A valid initiator ID |
| * is not on the bus until IO is asserted, so we must wait |
| * for that. |
| */ |
| ULOOP (100 * 1000) { |
| temp = STATUS; |
| if ((temp & STAT_IO) && !(temp & STAT_BSY)) |
| break; |
| if (TIMEOUT) { |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_RESELECT, "scsi%d : RESELECT timed out while waiting for IO .\n", hostno); |
| return (DID_BAD_INTR << 16); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * After I/O is asserted by the target, we can read our ID |
| * and its ID off of the BUS. |
| */ |
| |
| if (!((temp = DATA) & (controller_type == SEAGATE ? 0x80 : 0x40))) { |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_RESELECT, "scsi%d : detected reconnect request to different target.\n\tData bus = %d\n", hostno, temp); |
| return (DID_BAD_INTR << 16); |
| } |
| |
| if (!(temp & (1 << current_target))) { |
| printk(KERN_WARNING "scsi%d : Unexpected reselect interrupt. Data bus = %d\n", hostno, temp); |
| return (DID_BAD_INTR << 16); |
| } |
| |
| buffer = current_buffer; |
| cmnd = current_cmnd; /* WDE add */ |
| data = current_data; /* WDE add */ |
| len = current_bufflen; /* WDE add */ |
| nobuffs = current_nobuffs; |
| |
| /* |
| * We have determined that we have been selected. At this |
| * point, we must respond to the reselection by asserting |
| * BSY ourselves |
| */ |
| |
| #if 1 |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD | CMD_DRVR_ENABLE | CMD_BSY); |
| #else |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD | CMD_BSY); |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| * The target will drop SEL, and raise BSY, at which time |
| * we must drop BSY. |
| */ |
| |
| ULOOP (100 * 1000) { |
| if (!(STATUS & STAT_SEL)) |
| break; |
| if (TIMEOUT) { |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD | CMD_INTR); |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_RESELECT, "scsi%d : RESELECT timed out while waiting for SEL.\n", hostno); |
| return (DID_BAD_INTR << 16); |
| } |
| } |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD); |
| /* |
| * At this point, we have connected with the target |
| * and can get on with our lives. |
| */ |
| break; |
| case CAN_RECONNECT: |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| /* |
| * This is a bletcherous hack, just as bad as the Unix #! |
| * interpreter stuff. If it turns out we are using the wrong |
| * I_T_L nexus, the easiest way to deal with it is to go into |
| * our INFORMATION TRANSFER PHASE code, send a ABORT |
| * message on MESSAGE OUT phase, and then loop back to here. |
| */ |
| connect_loop: |
| #endif |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_BUS_FREE, "scsi%d : phase = BUS FREE \n", hostno); |
| |
| /* |
| * BUS FREE PHASE |
| * |
| * On entry, we make sure that the BUS is in a BUS FREE |
| * phase, by insuring that both BSY and SEL are low for |
| * at least one bus settle delay. Several reads help |
| * eliminate wire glitch. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef ARBITRATE |
| #error FIXME: this is broken: we may not use jiffies here - we are under cli(). It will hardlock. |
| clock = jiffies + ST0X_BUS_FREE_DELAY; |
| |
| while (((STATUS | STATUS | STATUS) & (STAT_BSY | STAT_SEL)) && (!st0x_aborted) && time_before (jiffies, clock)) |
| cpu_relax(); |
| |
| if (time_after (jiffies, clock)) |
| return retcode (DID_BUS_BUSY); |
| else if (st0x_aborted) |
| return retcode (st0x_aborted); |
| #endif |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_SELECTION, "scsi%d : phase = SELECTION\n", hostno); |
| |
| clock = jiffies + ST0X_SELECTION_DELAY; |
| |
| /* |
| * Arbitration/selection procedure : |
| * 1. Disable drivers |
| * 2. Write HOST adapter address bit |
| * 3. Set start arbitration. |
| * 4. We get either ARBITRATION COMPLETE or SELECT at this |
| * point. |
| * 5. OR our ID and targets on bus. |
| * 6. Enable SCSI drivers and asserted SEL and ATTN |
| */ |
| |
| #ifdef ARBITRATE |
| /* FIXME: verify host lock is always held here */ |
| WRITE_CONTROL(0); |
| WRITE_DATA((controller_type == SEAGATE) ? 0x80 : 0x40); |
| WRITE_CONTROL(CMD_START_ARB); |
| |
| ULOOP (ST0X_SELECTION_DELAY * 10000) { |
| status_read = STATUS; |
| if (status_read & STAT_ARB_CMPL) |
| break; |
| if (st0x_aborted) /* FIXME: What? We are going to do something even after abort? */ |
| break; |
| if (TIMEOUT || (status_read & STAT_SEL)) { |
| printk(KERN_WARNING "scsi%d : arbitration lost or timeout.\n", hostno); |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD); |
| return retcode (DID_NO_CONNECT); |
| } |
| } |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_SELECTION, "scsi%d : arbitration complete\n", hostno); |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| * When the SCSI device decides that we're gawking at it, |
| * it will respond by asserting BUSY on the bus. |
| * |
| * Note : the Seagate ST-01/02 product manual says that we |
| * should twiddle the DATA register before the control |
| * register. However, this does not work reliably so we do |
| * it the other way around. |
| * |
| * Probably could be a problem with arbitration too, we |
| * really should try this with a SCSI protocol or logic |
| * analyzer to see what is going on. |
| */ |
| tmp_data = (unsigned char) ((1 << target) | (controller_type == SEAGATE ? 0x80 : 0x40)); |
| tmp_control = BASE_CMD | CMD_DRVR_ENABLE | CMD_SEL | (reselect ? CMD_ATTN : 0); |
| |
| /* FIXME: verify host lock is always held here */ |
| #ifdef OLDCNTDATASCEME |
| #ifdef SWAPCNTDATA |
| WRITE_CONTROL (tmp_control); |
| WRITE_DATA (tmp_data); |
| #else |
| WRITE_DATA (tmp_data); |
| WRITE_CONTROL (tmp_control); |
| #endif |
| #else |
| tmp_control ^= CMD_BSY; /* This is guesswork. What used to be in driver */ |
| WRITE_CONTROL (tmp_control); /* could never work: it sent data into control */ |
| WRITE_DATA (tmp_data); /* register and control info into data. Hopefully */ |
| tmp_control ^= CMD_BSY; /* fixed, but order of first two may be wrong. */ |
| WRITE_CONTROL (tmp_control); /* -- pavel@ucw.cz */ |
| #endif |
| |
| ULOOP (250 * 1000) { |
| if (st0x_aborted) { |
| /* |
| * If we have been aborted, and we have a |
| * command in progress, IE the target |
| * still has BSY asserted, then we will |
| * reset the bus, and notify the midlevel |
| * driver to expect sense. |
| */ |
| |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD); |
| if (STATUS & STAT_BSY) { |
| printk(KERN_WARNING "scsi%d : BST asserted after we've been aborted.\n", hostno); |
| seagate_st0x_bus_reset(NULL); |
| return retcode (DID_RESET); |
| } |
| return retcode (st0x_aborted); |
| } |
| if (STATUS & STAT_BSY) |
| break; |
| if (TIMEOUT) { |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_SELECTION, "scsi%d : NO CONNECT with target %d, stat = %x \n", hostno, target, STATUS); |
| return retcode (DID_NO_CONNECT); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Establish current pointers. Take into account scatter / gather */ |
| |
| if ((nobuffs = SCint->use_sg)) { |
| #if (DEBUG & DEBUG_SG) |
| { |
| int i; |
| printk("scsi%d : scatter gather requested, using %d buffers.\n", hostno, nobuffs); |
| for (i = 0; i < nobuffs; ++i) |
| printk("scsi%d : buffer %d address = %p length = %d\n", |
| hostno, i, |
| page_address(buffer[i].page) + buffer[i].offset, |
| buffer[i].length); |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| buffer = (struct scatterlist *) SCint->buffer; |
| len = buffer->length; |
| data = page_address(buffer->page) + buffer->offset; |
| } else { |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_SG, "scsi%d : scatter gather not requested.\n", hostno); |
| buffer = NULL; |
| len = SCint->request_bufflen; |
| data = (unsigned char *) SCint->request_buffer; |
| } |
| |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_DATAIN | PHASE_DATAOUT, "scsi%d : len = %d\n", |
| hostno, len); |
| |
| break; |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| case LINKED_RIGHT: |
| break; |
| case LINKED_WRONG: |
| break; |
| #endif |
| } /* end of switch(reselect) */ |
| |
| /* |
| * There are several conditions under which we wish to send a message : |
| * 1. When we are allowing disconnect / reconnect, and need to |
| * establish the I_T_L nexus via an IDENTIFY with the DiscPriv bit |
| * set. |
| * |
| * 2. When we are doing linked commands, are have the wrong I_T_L |
| * nexus established and want to send an ABORT message. |
| */ |
| |
| /* GCC does not like an ifdef inside a macro, so do it the hard way. */ |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD | CMD_DRVR_ENABLE | (((reselect == CAN_RECONNECT)|| (reselect == LINKED_WRONG))? CMD_ATTN : 0)); |
| #else |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD | CMD_DRVR_ENABLE | (((reselect == CAN_RECONNECT))? CMD_ATTN : 0)); |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| * INFORMATION TRANSFER PHASE |
| * |
| * The nasty looking read / write inline assembler loops we use for |
| * DATAIN and DATAOUT phases are approximately 4-5 times as fast as |
| * the 'C' versions - since we're moving 1024 bytes of data, this |
| * really adds up. |
| * |
| * SJT: The nasty-looking assembler is gone, so it's slower. |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_ETC, "scsi%d : phase = INFORMATION TRANSFER\n", hostno); |
| |
| incommand = 1; |
| transfersize = SCint->transfersize; |
| underflow = SCint->underflow; |
| |
| /* |
| * Now, we poll the device for status information, |
| * and handle any requests it makes. Note that since we are unsure |
| * of how much data will be flowing across the system, etc and |
| * cannot make reasonable timeouts, that we will instead have the |
| * midlevel driver handle any timeouts that occur in this phase. |
| */ |
| |
| while (((status_read = STATUS) & STAT_BSY) && !st0x_aborted && !done) { |
| #ifdef PARITY |
| if (status_read & STAT_PARITY) { |
| printk(KERN_ERR "scsi%d : got parity error\n", hostno); |
| st0x_aborted = DID_PARITY; |
| } |
| #endif |
| if (status_read & STAT_REQ) { |
| #if ((DEBUG & PHASE_ETC) == PHASE_ETC) |
| if ((newphase = (status_read & REQ_MASK)) != phase) { |
| phase = newphase; |
| switch (phase) { |
| case REQ_DATAOUT: |
| printk ("scsi%d : phase = DATA OUT\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| case REQ_DATAIN: |
| printk ("scsi%d : phase = DATA IN\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| case REQ_CMDOUT: |
| printk |
| ("scsi%d : phase = COMMAND OUT\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| case REQ_STATIN: |
| printk ("scsi%d : phase = STATUS IN\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| case REQ_MSGOUT: |
| printk |
| ("scsi%d : phase = MESSAGE OUT\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| case REQ_MSGIN: |
| printk ("scsi%d : phase = MESSAGE IN\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| default: |
| printk ("scsi%d : phase = UNKNOWN\n", hostno); |
| st0x_aborted = DID_ERROR; |
| } |
| } |
| #endif |
| switch (status_read & REQ_MASK) { |
| case REQ_DATAOUT: |
| /* |
| * If we are in fast mode, then we simply splat |
| * the data out in word-sized chunks as fast as |
| * we can. |
| */ |
| |
| if (!len) { |
| #if 0 |
| printk("scsi%d: underflow to target %d lun %d \n", hostno, target, lun); |
| st0x_aborted = DID_ERROR; |
| fast = 0; |
| #endif |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| if (fast && transfersize |
| && !(len % transfersize) |
| && (len >= transfersize) |
| #ifdef FAST32 |
| && !(transfersize % 4) |
| #endif |
| ) { |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_FAST, |
| "scsi%d : FAST transfer, underflow = %d, transfersize = %d\n" |
| " len = %d, data = %08x\n", |
| hostno, SCint->underflow, |
| SCint->transfersize, len, |
| data); |
| |
| /* SJT: Start. Fast Write */ |
| #ifdef SEAGATE_USE_ASM |
| __asm__ ("cld\n\t" |
| #ifdef FAST32 |
| "shr $2, %%ecx\n\t" |
| "1:\t" |
| "lodsl\n\t" |
| "movl %%eax, (%%edi)\n\t" |
| #else |
| "1:\t" |
| "lodsb\n\t" |
| "movb %%al, (%%edi)\n\t" |
| #endif |
| "loop 1b;" |
| /* output */ : |
| /* input */ :"D" (st0x_dr), |
| "S" |
| (data), |
| "c" (SCint->transfersize) |
| /* clobbered */ |
| : "eax", "ecx", |
| "esi"); |
| #else /* SEAGATE_USE_ASM */ |
| memcpy_toio(st0x_dr, data, transfersize); |
| #endif /* SEAGATE_USE_ASM */ |
| /* SJT: End */ |
| len -= transfersize; |
| data += transfersize; |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_FAST, "scsi%d : FAST transfer complete len = %d data = %08x\n", hostno, len, data); |
| } else { |
| /* |
| * We loop as long as we are in a |
| * data out phase, there is data to |
| * send, and BSY is still active. |
| */ |
| |
| /* SJT: Start. Slow Write. */ |
| #ifdef SEAGATE_USE_ASM |
| |
| int __dummy_1, __dummy_2; |
| |
| /* |
| * We loop as long as we are in a data out phase, there is data to send, |
| * and BSY is still active. |
| */ |
| /* Local variables : len = ecx , data = esi, |
| st0x_cr_sr = ebx, st0x_dr = edi |
| */ |
| __asm__ ( |
| /* Test for any data here at all. */ |
| "orl %%ecx, %%ecx\n\t" |
| "jz 2f\n\t" "cld\n\t" |
| /* "movl st0x_cr_sr, %%ebx\n\t" */ |
| /* "movl st0x_dr, %%edi\n\t" */ |
| "1:\t" |
| "movb (%%ebx), %%al\n\t" |
| /* Test for BSY */ |
| "test $1, %%al\n\t" |
| "jz 2f\n\t" |
| /* Test for data out phase - STATUS & REQ_MASK should be |
| REQ_DATAOUT, which is 0. */ |
| "test $0xe, %%al\n\t" |
| "jnz 2f\n\t" |
| /* Test for REQ */ |
| "test $0x10, %%al\n\t" |
| "jz 1b\n\t" |
| "lodsb\n\t" |
| "movb %%al, (%%edi)\n\t" |
| "loop 1b\n\t" "2:\n" |
| /* output */ :"=S" (data), "=c" (len), |
| "=b" |
| (__dummy_1), |
| "=D" (__dummy_2) |
| /* input */ |
| : "0" (data), "1" (len), |
| "2" (st0x_cr_sr), |
| "3" (st0x_dr) |
| /* clobbered */ |
| : "eax"); |
| #else /* SEAGATE_USE_ASM */ |
| while (len) { |
| unsigned char stat; |
| |
| stat = STATUS; |
| if (!(stat & STAT_BSY) |
| || ((stat & REQ_MASK) != |
| REQ_DATAOUT)) |
| break; |
| if (stat & STAT_REQ) { |
| WRITE_DATA (*data++); |
| --len; |
| } |
| } |
| #endif /* SEAGATE_USE_ASM */ |
| /* SJT: End. */ |
| } |
| |
| if (!len && nobuffs) { |
| --nobuffs; |
| ++buffer; |
| len = buffer->length; |
| data = page_address(buffer->page) + buffer->offset; |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_SG, |
| "scsi%d : next scatter-gather buffer len = %d address = %08x\n", |
| hostno, len, data); |
| } |
| break; |
| |
| case REQ_DATAIN: |
| #ifdef SLOW_RATE |
| if (borken) { |
| #if (DEBUG & (PHASE_DATAIN)) |
| transfered += len; |
| #endif |
| for (; len && (STATUS & (REQ_MASK | STAT_REQ)) == (REQ_DATAIN | STAT_REQ); --len) { |
| *data++ = DATA; |
| borken_wait(); |
| } |
| #if (DEBUG & (PHASE_DATAIN)) |
| transfered -= len; |
| #endif |
| } else |
| #endif |
| |
| if (fast && transfersize |
| && !(len % transfersize) |
| && (len >= transfersize) |
| #ifdef FAST32 |
| && !(transfersize % 4) |
| #endif |
| ) { |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_FAST, |
| "scsi%d : FAST transfer, underflow = %d, transfersize = %d\n" |
| " len = %d, data = %08x\n", |
| hostno, SCint->underflow, |
| SCint->transfersize, len, |
| data); |
| |
| /* SJT: Start. Fast Read */ |
| #ifdef SEAGATE_USE_ASM |
| __asm__ ("cld\n\t" |
| #ifdef FAST32 |
| "shr $2, %%ecx\n\t" |
| "1:\t" |
| "movl (%%esi), %%eax\n\t" |
| "stosl\n\t" |
| #else |
| "1:\t" |
| "movb (%%esi), %%al\n\t" |
| "stosb\n\t" |
| #endif |
| "loop 1b\n\t" |
| /* output */ : |
| /* input */ :"S" (st0x_dr), |
| "D" |
| (data), |
| "c" (SCint->transfersize) |
| /* clobbered */ |
| : "eax", "ecx", |
| "edi"); |
| #else /* SEAGATE_USE_ASM */ |
| memcpy_fromio(data, st0x_dr, len); |
| #endif /* SEAGATE_USE_ASM */ |
| /* SJT: End */ |
| len -= transfersize; |
| data += transfersize; |
| #if (DEBUG & PHASE_DATAIN) |
| printk ("scsi%d: transfered += %d\n", hostno, transfersize); |
| transfered += transfersize; |
| #endif |
| |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_FAST, "scsi%d : FAST transfer complete len = %d data = %08x\n", hostno, len, data); |
| } else { |
| |
| #if (DEBUG & PHASE_DATAIN) |
| printk ("scsi%d: transfered += %d\n", hostno, len); |
| transfered += len; /* Assume we'll transfer it all, then |
| subtract what we *didn't* transfer */ |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| * We loop as long as we are in a data in phase, there is room to read, |
| * and BSY is still active |
| */ |
| |
| /* SJT: Start. */ |
| #ifdef SEAGATE_USE_ASM |
| |
| int __dummy_3, __dummy_4; |
| |
| /* Dummy clobbering variables for the new gcc-2.95 */ |
| |
| /* |
| * We loop as long as we are in a data in phase, there is room to read, |
| * and BSY is still active |
| */ |
| /* Local variables : ecx = len, edi = data |
| esi = st0x_cr_sr, ebx = st0x_dr */ |
| __asm__ ( |
| /* Test for room to read */ |
| "orl %%ecx, %%ecx\n\t" |
| "jz 2f\n\t" "cld\n\t" |
| /* "movl st0x_cr_sr, %%esi\n\t" */ |
| /* "movl st0x_dr, %%ebx\n\t" */ |
| "1:\t" |
| "movb (%%esi), %%al\n\t" |
| /* Test for BSY */ |
| "test $1, %%al\n\t" |
| "jz 2f\n\t" |
| /* Test for data in phase - STATUS & REQ_MASK should be REQ_DATAIN, |
| = STAT_IO, which is 4. */ |
| "movb $0xe, %%ah\n\t" |
| "andb %%al, %%ah\n\t" |
| "cmpb $0x04, %%ah\n\t" |
| "jne 2f\n\t" |
| /* Test for REQ */ |
| "test $0x10, %%al\n\t" |
| "jz 1b\n\t" |
| "movb (%%ebx), %%al\n\t" |
| "stosb\n\t" |
| "loop 1b\n\t" "2:\n" |
| /* output */ :"=D" (data), "=c" (len), |
| "=S" |
| (__dummy_3), |
| "=b" (__dummy_4) |
| /* input */ |
| : "0" (data), "1" (len), |
| "2" (st0x_cr_sr), |
| "3" (st0x_dr) |
| /* clobbered */ |
| : "eax"); |
| #else /* SEAGATE_USE_ASM */ |
| while (len) { |
| unsigned char stat; |
| |
| stat = STATUS; |
| if (!(stat & STAT_BSY) |
| || ((stat & REQ_MASK) != |
| REQ_DATAIN)) |
| break; |
| if (stat & STAT_REQ) { |
| *data++ = DATA; |
| --len; |
| } |
| } |
| #endif /* SEAGATE_USE_ASM */ |
| /* SJT: End. */ |
| #if (DEBUG & PHASE_DATAIN) |
| printk ("scsi%d: transfered -= %d\n", hostno, len); |
| transfered -= len; /* Since we assumed all of Len got * |
| transfered, correct our mistake */ |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| if (!len && nobuffs) { |
| --nobuffs; |
| ++buffer; |
| len = buffer->length; |
| data = page_address(buffer->page) + buffer->offset; |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_SG, "scsi%d : next scatter-gather buffer len = %d address = %08x\n", hostno, len, data); |
| } |
| break; |
| |
| case REQ_CMDOUT: |
| while (((status_read = STATUS) & STAT_BSY) && |
| ((status_read & REQ_MASK) == REQ_CMDOUT)) |
| if (status_read & STAT_REQ) { |
| WRITE_DATA (*(const unsigned char *) cmnd); |
| cmnd = 1 + (const unsigned char *)cmnd; |
| #ifdef SLOW_RATE |
| if (borken) |
| borken_wait (); |
| #endif |
| } |
| break; |
| |
| case REQ_STATIN: |
| status = DATA; |
| break; |
| |
| case REQ_MSGOUT: |
| /* |
| * We can only have sent a MSG OUT if we |
| * requested to do this by raising ATTN. |
| * So, we must drop ATTN. |
| */ |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD | CMD_DRVR_ENABLE); |
| /* |
| * If we are reconnecting, then we must |
| * send an IDENTIFY message in response |
| * to MSGOUT. |
| */ |
| switch (reselect) { |
| case CAN_RECONNECT: |
| WRITE_DATA (IDENTIFY (1, lun)); |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_RESELECT | PHASE_MSGOUT, "scsi%d : sent IDENTIFY message.\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| case LINKED_WRONG: |
| WRITE_DATA (ABORT); |
| linked_connected = 0; |
| reselect = CAN_RECONNECT; |
| goto connect_loop; |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_MSGOUT | DEBUG_LINKED, "scsi%d : sent ABORT message to cancel incorrect I_T_L nexus.\n", hostno); |
| #endif /* LINKED */ |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_LINKED, "correct\n"); |
| default: |
| WRITE_DATA (NOP); |
| printk("scsi%d : target %d requested MSGOUT, sent NOP message.\n", hostno, target); |
| } |
| break; |
| |
| case REQ_MSGIN: |
| switch (message = DATA) { |
| case DISCONNECT: |
| DANY("seagate: deciding to disconnect\n"); |
| should_reconnect = 1; |
| current_data = data; /* WDE add */ |
| current_buffer = buffer; |
| current_bufflen = len; /* WDE add */ |
| current_nobuffs = nobuffs; |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| linked_connected = 0; |
| #endif |
| done = 1; |
| DPRINTK ((PHASE_RESELECT | PHASE_MSGIN), "scsi%d : disconnected.\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| case LINKED_CMD_COMPLETE: |
| case LINKED_FLG_CMD_COMPLETE: |
| #endif |
| case COMMAND_COMPLETE: |
| /* |
| * Note : we should check for underflow here. |
| */ |
| DPRINTK(PHASE_MSGIN, "scsi%d : command complete.\n", hostno); |
| done = 1; |
| break; |
| case ABORT: |
| DPRINTK(PHASE_MSGIN, "scsi%d : abort message.\n", hostno); |
| done = 1; |
| break; |
| case SAVE_POINTERS: |
| current_buffer = buffer; |
| current_bufflen = len; /* WDE add */ |
| current_data = data; /* WDE mod */ |
| current_nobuffs = nobuffs; |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_MSGIN, "scsi%d : pointers saved.\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| case RESTORE_POINTERS: |
| buffer = current_buffer; |
| cmnd = current_cmnd; |
| data = current_data; /* WDE mod */ |
| len = current_bufflen; |
| nobuffs = current_nobuffs; |
| DPRINTK(PHASE_MSGIN, "scsi%d : pointers restored.\n", hostno); |
| break; |
| default: |
| |
| /* |
| * IDENTIFY distinguishes itself |
| * from the other messages by |
| * setting the high bit. |
| * |
| * Note : we need to handle at |
| * least one outstanding command |
| * per LUN, and need to hash the |
| * SCSI command for that I_T_L |
| * nexus based on the known ID |
| * (at this point) and LUN. |
| */ |
| |
| if (message & 0x80) { |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_MSGIN, "scsi%d : IDENTIFY message received from id %d, lun %d.\n", hostno, target, message & 7); |
| } else { |
| /* |
| * We should go into a |
| * MESSAGE OUT phase, and |
| * send a MESSAGE_REJECT |
| * if we run into a message |
| * that we don't like. The |
| * seagate driver needs |
| * some serious |
| * restructuring first |
| * though. |
| */ |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_MSGIN, "scsi%d : unknown message %d from target %d.\n", hostno, message, target); |
| } |
| } |
| break; |
| default: |
| printk(KERN_ERR "scsi%d : unknown phase.\n", hostno); |
| st0x_aborted = DID_ERROR; |
| } /* end of switch (status_read & REQ_MASK) */ |
| #ifdef SLOW_RATE |
| /* |
| * I really don't care to deal with borken devices in |
| * each single byte transfer case (ie, message in, |
| * message out, status), so I'll do the wait here if |
| * necessary. |
| */ |
| if(borken) |
| borken_wait(); |
| #endif |
| |
| } /* if(status_read & STAT_REQ) ends */ |
| } /* while(((status_read = STATUS)...) ends */ |
| |
| DPRINTK(PHASE_DATAIN | PHASE_DATAOUT | PHASE_EXIT, "scsi%d : Transfered %d bytes\n", hostno, transfered); |
| |
| #if (DEBUG & PHASE_EXIT) |
| #if 0 /* Doesn't work for scatter/gather */ |
| printk("Buffer : \n"); |
| for(i = 0; i < 20; ++i) |
| printk("%02x ", ((unsigned char *) data)[i]); /* WDE mod */ |
| printk("\n"); |
| #endif |
| printk("scsi%d : status = ", hostno); |
| scsi_print_status(status); |
| printk(" message = %02x\n", message); |
| #endif |
| |
| /* We shouldn't reach this until *after* BSY has been deasserted */ |
| |
| #ifdef LINKED |
| else |
| { |
| /* |
| * Fix the message byte so that unsuspecting high level drivers |
| * don't puke when they see a LINKED COMMAND message in place of |
| * the COMMAND COMPLETE they may be expecting. Shouldn't be |
| * necessary, but it's better to be on the safe side. |
| * |
| * A non LINKED* message byte will indicate that the command |
| * completed, and we are now disconnected. |
| */ |
| |
| switch (message) { |
| case LINKED_CMD_COMPLETE: |
| case LINKED_FLG_CMD_COMPLETE: |
| message = COMMAND_COMPLETE; |
| linked_target = current_target; |
| linked_lun = current_lun; |
| linked_connected = 1; |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_LINKED, "scsi%d : keeping I_T_L nexus established for linked command.\n", hostno); |
| /* We also will need to adjust status to accommodate intermediate |
| conditions. */ |
| if ((status == INTERMEDIATE_GOOD) || (status == INTERMEDIATE_C_GOOD)) |
| status = GOOD; |
| break; |
| /* |
| * We should also handle what are "normal" termination |
| * messages here (ABORT, BUS_DEVICE_RESET?, and |
| * COMMAND_COMPLETE individually, and flake if things |
| * aren't right. |
| */ |
| default: |
| DPRINTK (DEBUG_LINKED, "scsi%d : closing I_T_L nexus.\n", hostno); |
| linked_connected = 0; |
| } |
| } |
| #endif /* LINKED */ |
| |
| if (should_reconnect) { |
| DPRINTK (PHASE_RESELECT, "scsi%d : exiting seagate_st0x_queue_command() with reconnect enabled.\n", hostno); |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD | CMD_INTR); |
| } else |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD); |
| |
| return retcode (st0x_aborted); |
| } /* end of internal_command */ |
| |
| static int seagate_st0x_abort (Scsi_Cmnd * SCpnt) |
| { |
| st0x_aborted = DID_ABORT; |
| return SUCCESS; |
| } |
| |
| #undef ULOOP |
| #undef TIMEOUT |
| |
| /* |
| * the seagate_st0x_reset function resets the SCSI bus |
| * |
| * May be called with SCpnt = NULL |
| */ |
| |
| static int seagate_st0x_bus_reset(Scsi_Cmnd * SCpnt) |
| { |
| /* No timeouts - this command is going to fail because it was reset. */ |
| DANY ("scsi%d: Reseting bus... ", hostno); |
| |
| /* assert RESET signal on SCSI bus. */ |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD | CMD_RST); |
| |
| mdelay (20); |
| |
| WRITE_CONTROL (BASE_CMD); |
| st0x_aborted = DID_RESET; |
| |
| DANY ("done.\n"); |
| return SUCCESS; |
| } |
| |
| static int seagate_st0x_release(struct Scsi_Host *shost) |
| { |
| if (shost->irq) |
| free_irq(shost->irq, shost); |
| release_region(shost->io_port, shost->n_io_port); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| static struct scsi_host_template driver_template = { |
| .detect = seagate_st0x_detect, |
| .release = seagate_st0x_release, |
| .info = seagate_st0x_info, |
| .queuecommand = seagate_st0x_queue_command, |
| .eh_abort_handler = seagate_st0x_abort, |
| .eh_bus_reset_handler = seagate_st0x_bus_reset, |
| .can_queue = 1, |
| .this_id = 7, |
| .sg_tablesize = SG_ALL, |
| .cmd_per_lun = 1, |
| .use_clustering = DISABLE_CLUSTERING, |
| }; |
| #include "scsi_module.c" |