Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | The tmscsim driver |
| 2 | ================== |
| 3 | |
| 4 | 1. Purpose and history |
| 5 | 2. Installation |
| 6 | 3. Features |
| 7 | 4. Configuration via /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? |
| 8 | 5. Configuration via boot/module params |
| 9 | 6. Potential improvements |
| 10 | 7. Bug reports, debugging and updates |
| 11 | 8. Acknowledgements |
| 12 | 9. Copyright |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | 1. Purpose and history |
| 16 | ---------------------- |
| 17 | The tmscsim driver supports PCI SCSI Host Adapters based on the AM53C974 |
| 18 | chip. AM53C974 based SCSI adapters include: |
| 19 | Tekram DC390, DC390T |
| 20 | Dawicontrol 2974 |
| 21 | QLogic Fast! PCI Basic |
| 22 | some on-board adapters |
| 23 | (This is most probably not a complete list) |
| 24 | |
| 25 | It has originally written by C.L. Huang from the Tekram corp. to support the |
| 26 | Tekram DC390(T) adapter. This is where the name comes from: tm = Tekram |
| 27 | scsi = SCSI driver, m = AMD (?) as opposed to w for the DC390W/U/F |
| 28 | (NCR53c8X5, X=2/7) driver. Yes, there was also a driver for the latter, |
| 29 | tmscsiw, which supported DC390W/U/F adapters. It's not maintained any more, |
Matt LaPlante | 3f6dee9 | 2006-10-03 22:45:33 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 30 | as the ncr53c8xx is perfectly supporting these adapters since some time. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 31 | |
| 32 | The driver first appeared in April 1996, exclusively supported the DC390 |
| 33 | and has been enhanced since then in various steps. In May 1998 support for |
| 34 | general AM53C974 based adapters and some possibilities to configure it were |
| 35 | added. The non-DC390 support works by assuming some values for the data |
| 36 | normally taken from the DC390 EEPROM. See below (chapter 5) for details. |
| 37 | |
| 38 | When using the DC390, the configuration is still be done using the DC390 |
| 39 | BIOS setup. The DC390 EEPROM is read and used by the driver, any boot or |
| 40 | module parameters (chapter 5) are ignored! However, you can change settings |
| 41 | dynamically, as described in chapter 4. |
| 42 | |
| 43 | For a more detailed description of the driver's history, see the first lines |
| 44 | of tmscsim.c. |
| 45 | The numbering scheme isn't consistent. The first versions went from 1.00 to |
| 46 | 1.12, then 1.20a to 1.20t. Finally I decided to use the ncr53c8xx scheme. So |
| 47 | the next revisions will be 2.0a to 2.0X (stable), 2.1a to 2.1X (experimental), |
| 48 | 2.2a to 2.2X (stable, again) etc. (X = anything between a and z.) If I send |
| 49 | fixes to people for testing, I create intermediate versions with a digit |
| 50 | appended, e.g. 2.0c3. |
| 51 | |
| 52 | |
| 53 | 2. Installation |
| 54 | --------------- |
| 55 | If you got any recent kernel with this driver and document included in |
| 56 | linux/drivers/scsi, you basically have to do nothing special to use this |
| 57 | driver. Of course you have to choose to compile SCSI support and DC390(T) |
| 58 | support into your kernel or as module when configuring your kernel for |
| 59 | compiling. |
| 60 | NEW: You may as well compile this module outside your kernel, using the |
| 61 | supplied Makefile. |
| 62 | |
| 63 | If you got an old kernel (pre 2.1.127, pre 2.0.37p1) with an old version of |
| 64 | this driver: Get dc390-21125-20b.diff.gz or dc390-2036p21-20b1.diff.gz from |
| 65 | my web page and apply the patch. Apply further patches to upgrade to the |
| 66 | latest version of the driver. |
| 67 | |
| 68 | If you want to do it manually, you should copy the files (dc390.h, |
| 69 | tmscsim.h, tmscsim.c, scsiiom.c and README.tmscsim) from this directory to |
| 70 | linux/drivers/scsi. You have to recompile your kernel/module of course. |
| 71 | |
| 72 | You should apply the three patches included in dc390-120-kernel.diff |
| 73 | (Applying them: cd /usr/src; patch -p0 <~/dc390-120-kernel.diff) |
| 74 | The patches are against 2.1.125, so you might have to manually resolve |
| 75 | rejections when applying to another kernel version. |
| 76 | |
| 77 | The patches will update the kernel startup code to allow boot parameters to |
| 78 | be passed to the driver, update the Documentation and finally offer you the |
| 79 | possibility to omit the non-DC390 parts of the driver. |
| 80 | (By selecting "Omit support for non DC390" you basically disable the |
| 81 | emulation of a DC390 EEPROM for non DC390 adapters. This saves a few bytes |
| 82 | of memory.) |
| 83 | |
| 84 | If you got a very old kernel without the tmscsim driver (pre 2.0.31) |
| 85 | I recommend upgrading your kernel. However, if you don't want to, please |
| 86 | contact me to get the appropriate patches. |
| 87 | |
| 88 | |
| 89 | Upgrading a SCSI driver is always a delicate thing to do. The 2.0 driver has |
| 90 | proven stable on many systems, but it's still a good idea to take some |
| 91 | precautions. In an ideal world you would have a full backup of your disks. |
| 92 | The world isn't ideal and most people don't have full backups (me neither). |
| 93 | So take at least the following measures: |
| 94 | * make your kernel remount the FS read-only on detecting an error: |
| 95 | tune2fs -e remount-ro /dev/sd?? |
| 96 | * have copies of your SCSI disk's partition tables on some safe location: |
| 97 | dd if=/dev/sda of=/mnt/floppy/sda bs=512 count=1 |
| 98 | or just print it with: |
| 99 | fdisk -l | lpr |
| 100 | * make sure you are able to boot Linux (e.g. from floppy disk using InitRD) |
| 101 | if your SCSI disk gets corrupted. You can use |
| 102 | ftp://student.physik.uni-dortmund.de/pub/linux/kernel/bootdisk.gz |
| 103 | |
| 104 | One more warning: I used to overclock my PCI bus to 41.67 MHz. My Tekram |
| 105 | DC390F (Sym53c875) accepted this as well as my Millenium. But the Am53C974 |
| 106 | produced errors and started to corrupt my disks. So don't do that! A 37.50 |
| 107 | MHz PCI bus works for me, though, but I don't recommend using higher clocks |
| 108 | than the 33.33 MHz being in the PCI spec. |
| 109 | |
| 110 | If you want to share the IRQ with another device and the driver refuses to |
| 111 | do so, you might succeed with changing the DC390_IRQ type in tmscsim.c to |
Thomas Gleixner | 6ce6c7f | 2006-07-01 19:29:47 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 112 | IRQF_SHARED | IRQF_DISABLED. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 113 | |
| 114 | |
| 115 | 3.Features |
| 116 | ---------- |
| 117 | - SCSI |
| 118 | * Tagged command queueing |
| 119 | * Sync speed up to 10 MHz |
| 120 | * Disconnection |
| 121 | * Multiple LUNs |
| 122 | |
| 123 | - General / Linux interface |
| 124 | * Support for up to 4 AM53C974 adapters. |
| 125 | * DC390 EEPROM usage or boot/module params |
| 126 | * Information via cat /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? |
| 127 | * Dynamically configurable by writing to /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? |
| 128 | * Dynamic allocation of resources |
| 129 | * SMP support: Locking on io_request lock (Linux 2.1/2.2) or adapter |
| 130 | specific locks (Linux 2.5?) |
| 131 | * Uniform source code for Linux-2.x.y |
| 132 | * Support for dyn. addition/removal of devices via add/remove-single-device |
| 133 | (Try: echo "scsi add-single-device C B T U" >/proc/scsi/scsi |
| 134 | C = Controller, B = Bus, T = Target SCSI ID, U = Unit SCSI LUN.) |
| 135 | Use with care! |
| 136 | * Try to use the partition table for the determination of the mapping |
| 137 | |
| 138 | |
| 139 | 4. Configuration via /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? |
| 140 | ----------------------------------------- |
| 141 | First of all look at the output of /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? by typing |
| 142 | cat /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? |
| 143 | The "?" should be replaced by the SCSI host number. (The shell might do this |
| 144 | for you.) |
| 145 | You will see some info regarding the adapter and, at the end, a listing of |
| 146 | the attached devices and their settings. |
| 147 | |
| 148 | Here's an example: |
| 149 | garloff@kurt:/home/garloff > cat /proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 |
| 150 | Tekram DC390/AM53C974 PCI SCSI Host Adapter, Driver Version 2.0e7 2000-11-28 |
| 151 | SCSI Host Nr 1, AM53C974 Adapter Nr 0 |
| 152 | IOPortBase 0xb000, IRQ 10 |
| 153 | MaxID 8, MaxLUN 8, AdapterID 6, SelTimeout 250 ms, DelayReset 1 s |
| 154 | TagMaxNum 16, Status 0x00, ACBFlag 0x00, GlitchEater 24 ns |
| 155 | Statistics: Cmnds 1470165, Cmnds not sent directly 0, Out of SRB conds 0 |
| 156 | Lost arbitrations 587, Sel. connected 0, Connected: No |
| 157 | Nr of attached devices: 4, Nr of DCBs: 4 |
| 158 | Map of attached LUNs: 01 00 00 03 01 00 00 00 |
| 159 | Idx ID LUN Prty Sync DsCn SndS TagQ NegoPeriod SyncSpeed SyncOffs MaxCmd |
| 160 | 00 00 00 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 100 ns 10.0 M 15 16 |
| 161 | 01 03 00 Yes Yes Yes Yes No 100 ns 10.0 M 15 01 |
| 162 | 02 03 01 Yes Yes Yes Yes No 100 ns 10.0 M 15 01 |
| 163 | 03 04 00 Yes Yes Yes Yes No 100 ns 10.0 M 15 01 |
| 164 | |
| 165 | Note that the settings MaxID and MaxLUN are not zero- but one-based, which |
| 166 | means that a setting MaxLUN=4, will result in the support of LUNs 0..3. This |
| 167 | is somehow inconvenient, but the way the mid-level SCSI code expects it to be. |
| 168 | |
| 169 | ACB and DCB are acronyms for Adapter Control Block and Device Control Block. |
| 170 | These are data structures of the driver containing information about the |
| 171 | adapter and the connected SCSI devices respectively. |
| 172 | |
| 173 | Idx is the device index (just a consecutive number for the driver), ID and |
| 174 | LUN are the SCSI ID and LUN, Prty means Parity checking, Sync synchronous |
| 175 | negotiation, DsCn Disconnection, SndS Send Start command on startup (not |
| 176 | used by the driver) and TagQ Tagged Command Queueing. NegoPeriod and |
| 177 | SyncSpeed are somehow redundant, because they are reciprocal values |
| 178 | (1 / 112 ns = 8.9 MHz). At least in theory. The driver is able to adjust the |
| 179 | NegoPeriod more accurate (4ns) than the SyncSpeed (1 / 25ns). I don't know |
| 180 | if certain devices will have problems with this discrepancy. Max. speed is |
| 181 | 10 MHz corresp. to a min. NegoPeriod of 100 ns. |
| 182 | (The driver allows slightly higher speeds if the devices (Ultra SCSI) accept |
| 183 | it, but that's out of adapter spec, on your own risk and unlikely to improve |
| 184 | performance. You're likely to crash your disks.) |
| 185 | SyncOffs is the offset used for synchronous negotiations; max. is 15. |
| 186 | The last values are only shown, if Sync is enabled. (NegoPeriod is still |
| 187 | displayed in brackets to show the values which will be used after enabling |
| 188 | Sync.) |
| 189 | MaxCmd ist the number of commands (=tags) which can be processed at the same |
| 190 | time by the device. |
| 191 | |
| 192 | If you want to change a setting, you can do that by writing to |
| 193 | /proc/scsi/tmscsim/?. Basically you have to imitate the output of driver. |
| 194 | (Don't use the brackets for NegoPeriod on Sync disabled devices.) |
| 195 | You don't have to care about capitalisation. The driver will accept space, |
| 196 | tab, comma, = and : as separators. |
| 197 | |
| 198 | There are three kinds of changes: |
| 199 | |
| 200 | (1) Change driver settings: |
| 201 | You type the names of the parameters and the params following it. |
| 202 | Example: |
| 203 | echo "MaxLUN=8 seltimeout 200" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 |
| 204 | |
| 205 | Note that you can only change MaxID, MaxLUN, AdapterID, SelTimeOut, |
| 206 | TagMaxNum, ACBFlag, GlitchEater and DelayReset. Don't change ACBFlag |
| 207 | unless you want to see what happens, if the driver hangs. |
| 208 | |
| 209 | (2) Change device settings: You write a config line to the driver. The Nr |
| 210 | must match the ID and LUN given. If you give "-" as parameter, it is |
| 211 | ignored and the corresponding setting won't be changed. |
| 212 | You can use "y" or "n" instead of "Yes" and "No" if you want to. |
| 213 | You don't need to specify a full line. The driver automatically performs |
| 214 | an INQUIRY on the device if necessary to check if it is capable to operate |
| 215 | with the given settings (Sync, TagQ). |
| 216 | Examples: |
| 217 | echo "0 0 0 y y y - y - 10 " >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 |
| 218 | echo "3 5 0 y n y " >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 |
| 219 | |
| 220 | To give a short explanation of the first example: |
| 221 | The first three numbers, "0 0 0" (Device index 0, SCSI ID 0, SCSI LUN 0), |
| 222 | select the device to which the following parameters apply. Note that it |
| 223 | would be sufficient to use the index or both SCSI ID and LUN, but I chose |
| 224 | to require all three to have a syntax similar to the output. |
| 225 | The following "y y y - y" enables Parity checking, enables Synchronous |
| 226 | transfers, Disconnection, leaves Send Start (not used) untouched and |
| 227 | enables Tagged Command Queueing for the selected device. The "-" skips |
| 228 | the Negotiation Period setting but the "10" sets the max sync. speed to |
| 229 | 10 MHz. It's useless to specify both NegoPeriod and SyncSpeed as |
| 230 | discussed above. The values used in this example will result in maximum |
| 231 | performance. |
| 232 | |
| 233 | (3) Special commands: You can force a SCSI bus reset, an INQUIRY command, the |
| 234 | removal or the addition of a device's DCB and a SCSI register dump. |
| 235 | This is only used for debugging when you meet problems. The parameter of |
| 236 | the INQUIRY and REMOVE commands is the device index as shown by the |
| 237 | output of /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? in the device listing in the first column |
| 238 | (Idx). ADD takes the SCSI ID and LUN. |
| 239 | Examples: |
| 240 | echo "reset" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 |
| 241 | echo "inquiry 1" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 |
| 242 | echo "remove 2" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/1 |
| 243 | echo "add 2 3" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/? |
| 244 | echo "dump" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/0 |
| 245 | |
| 246 | Note that you will meet problems when you REMOVE a device's DCB with the |
| 247 | remove command if it contains partitions which are mounted. Only use it |
| 248 | after unmounting its partitions, telling the SCSI mid-level code to |
| 249 | remove it (scsi remove-single-device) and you really need a few bytes of |
| 250 | memory. |
| 251 | The ADD command allows you to configure a device before you tell the |
| 252 | mid-level code to try detection. |
| 253 | |
| 254 | |
| 255 | I'd suggest reviewing the output of /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? after changing |
| 256 | settings to see if everything changed as requested. |
| 257 | |
| 258 | |
| 259 | 5. Configuration via boot/module parameters |
| 260 | ------------------------------------------- |
| 261 | With the DC390, the driver reads its EEPROM settings and tries to use them. |
| 262 | But you may want to override the settings prior to being able to change the |
| 263 | driver configuration via /proc/scsi/tmscsim/?. |
| 264 | If you do have another AM53C974 based adapter, that's even the only |
| 265 | possibility to adjust settings before you are able to write to the |
| 266 | /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? pseudo-file, e.g. if you want to use another |
| 267 | adapter ID than 7. |
| 268 | (BTW, the log message "DC390: No EEPROM found!" is normal without a DC390.) |
| 269 | For this purpose, you can pass options to the driver before it is initialised |
| 270 | by using kernel or module parameters. See lilo(8) or modprobe(1) manual |
| 271 | pages on how to pass params to the kernel or a module. |
| 272 | [NOTE: Formerly, it was not possible to override the EEPROM supplied |
| 273 | settings of the DC390 with cmd line parameters. This has changed since |
| 274 | 2.0e7] |
| 275 | |
| 276 | The syntax of the params is much shorter than the syntax of the /proc/... |
| 277 | interface. This makes it a little bit more difficult to use. However, long |
| 278 | parameter lines have the risk to be misinterpreted and the length of kernel |
| 279 | parameters is limited. |
| 280 | |
| 281 | As the support for non-DC390 adapters works by simulating the values of the |
| 282 | DC390 EEPROM, the settings are given in a DC390 BIOS' way. |
| 283 | |
| 284 | Here's the syntax: |
| 285 | tmscsim=AdaptID,SpdIdx,DevMode,AdaptMode,TaggedCmnds,DelayReset |
| 286 | |
| 287 | Each of the parameters is a number, containing the described information: |
| 288 | |
| 289 | * AdaptID: The SCSI ID of the host adapter. Must be in the range 0..7 |
| 290 | Default is 7. |
| 291 | |
| 292 | * SpdIdx: The index of the maximum speed as in the DC390 BIOS. The values |
| 293 | 0..7 mean 10, 8.0, 6.7, 5.7, 5.0, 4.0, 3.1 and 2 MHz resp. Default is |
| 294 | 0 (10.0 MHz). |
| 295 | |
| 296 | * DevMode is a bit mapped value describing the per-device features. It |
| 297 | applies to all devices. (Sync, Disc and TagQ will only apply, if the |
| 298 | device supports it.) The meaning of the bits (* = default): |
| 299 | |
| 300 | Bit Val(hex) Val(dec) Meaning |
| 301 | *0 0x01 1 Parity check |
| 302 | *1 0x02 2 Synchronous Negotiation |
| 303 | *2 0x04 4 Disconnection |
| 304 | *3 0x08 8 Send Start command on startup. (Not used) |
| 305 | *4 0x10 16 Tagged Command Queueing |
| 306 | |
| 307 | As usual, the desired value is obtained by adding the wanted values. If |
| 308 | you want to enable all values, e.g., you would use 31(0x1f). Default is 31. |
| 309 | |
| 310 | * AdaptMode is a bit mapped value describing the enabled adapter features. |
| 311 | |
| 312 | Bit Val(hex) Val(dec) Meaning |
| 313 | *0 0x01 1 Support more than two drives. (Not used) |
| 314 | *1 0x02 2 Use DOS compatible mapping for HDs greater than 1GB. |
| 315 | *2 0x04 4 Reset SCSI Bus on startup. |
| 316 | *3 0x08 8 Active Negation: Improves SCSI Bus noise immunity. |
| 317 | 4 0x10 16 Immediate return on BIOS seek command. (Not used) |
| 318 | (*)5 0x20 32 Check for LUNs >= 1. |
| 319 | |
| 320 | The default for LUN Check depends on CONFIG_SCSI_MULTI_LUN. |
| 321 | |
| 322 | * TaggedCmnds is a number indicating the maximum number of Tagged Commands. |
| 323 | It is the binary logarithm - 1 of the actual number. Max is 4 (32). |
| 324 | Value Number of Tagged Commands |
| 325 | 0 2 |
| 326 | 1 4 |
| 327 | 2 8 |
| 328 | *3 16 |
| 329 | 4 32 |
| 330 | |
| 331 | * DelayReset is the time in seconds (minus 0.5s), the adapter waits, after a |
| 332 | bus reset. Default is 1 (corresp. to 1.5s). |
| 333 | |
| 334 | Example: |
| 335 | modprobe tmscsim tmscsim=6,2,31 |
| 336 | would set the adapter ID to 6, max. speed to 6.7 MHz, enable all device |
| 337 | features and leave the adapter features, the number of Tagged Commands |
| 338 | and the Delay after a reset to the defaults. |
| 339 | |
| 340 | As you can see, you don't need to specify all of the six params. |
| 341 | If you want values to be ignored (i.e. the EEprom settings or the defaults |
| 342 | will be used), you may pass -2 (not 0!) at the corresponding position. |
| 343 | |
| 344 | The defaults (7,0,31,15,3,1) are aggressive to allow good performance. You |
| 345 | can use tmscsim=7,0,31,63,4,0 for maximum performance, if your SCSI chain |
| 346 | allows it. If you meet problems, you can use tmscsim=-1 which is a shortcut |
| 347 | for tmscsim=7,4,9,15,2,10. |
| 348 | |
| 349 | |
| 350 | 6. Potential improvements |
| 351 | ------------------------- |
| 352 | Most of the intended work on the driver has been done. Here are a few ideas |
| 353 | to further improve its usability: |
| 354 | |
| 355 | * Cleanly separate per-Target and per-LUN properties (DCB) |
| 356 | * More intelligent abort() routine |
| 357 | * Use new_eh code (Linux-2.1+) |
| 358 | * Have the mid-level (ML) code (and not the driver) handle more of the |
| 359 | various conditions. |
| 360 | * Command queueing in the driver: Eliminate Query list and use ML instead. |
| 361 | * More user friendly boot/module param syntax |
| 362 | |
| 363 | Further investigation on these problems: |
| 364 | |
| 365 | * Driver hangs with sync readcdda (xcdroast) (most probably VIA PCI error) |
| 366 | |
| 367 | Known problems: |
| 368 | Please see http://www.garloff.de/kurt/linux/dc390/problems.html |
| 369 | |
| 370 | * Changing the parameters of multi-lun by the tmscsim/? interface will |
| 371 | cause problems, cause these settings are mostly per Target and not per LUN |
| 372 | and should be updated accordingly. To be fixed for 2.0d24. |
| 373 | * CDRs (eg Yam CRW4416) not recognized, because some buggy devices don't |
| 374 | recover from a SCSI reset in time. Use a higher delay or don't issue |
| 375 | a SCSI bus reset on driver initialization. See problems page. |
| 376 | For the CRW4416S, this seems to be solved with firmware 1.0g (reported by |
| 377 | Jean-Yves Barbier). |
| 378 | * TEAC CD-532S not being recognized. (Works with 1.11). |
| 379 | * Scanners (eg. Astra UMAX 1220S) don't work: Disable Sync Negotiation. |
| 380 | If this does not help, try echo "INQUIRY t" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/? (t |
| 381 | replaced by the dev index of your scanner). You may try to reset your SCSI |
| 382 | bus afterwards (echo "RESET" >/proc/scsi/tmscsim/?). |
| 383 | The problem seems to be solved as of 2.0d18, thanks to Andreas Rick. |
Matt LaPlante | fff9289 | 2006-10-03 22:47:42 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 384 | * If there is a valid partition table, the driver will use it for determining |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 385 | the mapping. If there's none, a reasonable mapping (Symbios-like) will be |
| 386 | assumed. Other operating systems may not like this mapping, though |
| 387 | it's consistent with the BIOS' behaviour. Old DC390 drivers ignored the |
| 388 | partition table and used a H/S = 64/32 or 255/63 translation. So if you |
| 389 | want to be compatible to those, use this old mapping when creating |
| 390 | partition tables. Even worse, on bootup the DC390 might complain if other |
| 391 | mappings are found, so auto rebooting may fail. |
| 392 | * In some situations, the driver will get stuck in an abort loop. This is a |
| 393 | bad interaction between the Mid-Layer of Linux' SCSI code and the driver. |
| 394 | Try to disable DsCn, if you meet this problem. Please contact me for |
| 395 | further debugging. |
| 396 | |
| 397 | |
| 398 | 7. Bug reports, debugging and updates |
| 399 | ------------------------------------- |
| 400 | Whenever you have problems with the driver, you are invited to ask the |
| 401 | author for help. However, I'd suggest reading the docs and trying to solve |
| 402 | the problem yourself, first. |
| 403 | If you find something, which you believe to be a bug, please report it to me. |
| 404 | Please append the output of /proc/scsi/scsi, /proc/scsi/tmscsim/? and |
| 405 | maybe the DC390 log messages to the report. |
| 406 | |
| 407 | Bug reports should be send to me (Kurt Garloff <dc390@garloff.de>) as well |
| 408 | as to the linux-scsi list (<linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org>), as sometimes bugs |
| 409 | are caused by the SCSI mid-level code. |
| 410 | |
| 411 | I will ask you for some more details and probably I will also ask you to |
| 412 | enable some of the DEBUG options in the driver (tmscsim.c:DC390_DEBUGXXX |
| 413 | defines). The driver will produce some data for the syslog facility then. |
| 414 | Beware: If your syslog gets written to a SCSI disk connected to your |
| 415 | AM53C974, the logging might produce log output again, and you might end |
| 416 | having your box spending most of its time doing the logging. |
| 417 | |
| 418 | The latest version of the driver can be found at: |
| 419 | http://www.garloff.de/kurt/linux/dc390/ |
| 420 | ftp://ftp.suse.com/pub/people/garloff/linux/dc390/ |
| 421 | |
| 422 | |
| 423 | 8. Acknowledgements |
| 424 | ------------------- |
| 425 | Thanks to Linus Torvalds, Alan Cox, the FSF people, the XFree86 team and |
| 426 | all the others for the wonderful OS and software. |
| 427 | Thanks to C.L. Huang and Philip Giang (Tekram) for the initial driver |
| 428 | release and support. |
John Anthony Kazos Jr | be2a608 | 2007-05-09 08:50:42 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 429 | Thanks to Doug Ledford, GĂ©rard Roudier for support with SCSI coding. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 430 | Thanks to a lot of people (espec. Chiaki Ishikawa, Andreas Haumer, Hubert |
| 431 | Tonneau) for intensively testing the driver (and even risking data loss |
| 432 | doing this during early revisions). |
| 433 | Recently, SuSE GmbH, Nuernberg, FRG, has been paying me for the driver |
| 434 | development and maintenance. Special thanks! |
| 435 | |
| 436 | |
| 437 | 9. Copyright |
| 438 | ------------ |
| 439 | This driver is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| 440 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
| 441 | the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. |
| 442 | If you want to use any later version of the GNU GPL, you will probably |
| 443 | be allowed to, but you have to ask me and Tekram <erich@tekram.com.tw> |
| 444 | before. |
| 445 | |
| 446 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 447 | Written by Kurt Garloff <kurt@garloff.de> 1998/06/11 |
| 448 | Last updated 2000/11/28, driver revision 2.0e7 |
| 449 | $Id: README.tmscsim,v 2.25.2.7 2000/12/20 01:07:12 garloff Exp $ |