2 * in2000.c - Linux device driver for the
3 * Always IN2000 ISA SCSI card.
5 * Copyright (c) 1996 John Shifflett, GeoLog Consulting
9 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
14 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 * GNU General Public License for more details.
19 * For the avoidance of doubt the "preferred form" of this code is one which
20 * is in an open non patent encumbered format. Where cryptographic key signing
21 * forms part of the process of creating an executable the information
22 * including keys needed to generate an equivalently functional executable
23 * are deemed to be part of the source code.
25 * Drew Eckhardt's excellent 'Generic NCR5380' sources provided
26 * much of the inspiration and some of the code for this driver.
27 * The Linux IN2000 driver distributed in the Linux kernels through
28 * version 1.2.13 was an extremely valuable reference on the arcane
29 * (and still mysterious) workings of the IN2000's fifo. It also
30 * is where I lifted in2000_biosparam(), the gist of the card
31 * detection scheme, and other bits of code. Many thanks to the
32 * talented and courageous people who wrote, contributed to, and
33 * maintained that driver (including Brad McLean, Shaun Savage,
34 * Bill Earnest, Larry Doolittle, Roger Sunshine, John Luckey,
35 * Matt Postiff, Peter Lu, zerucha@shell.portal.com, and Eric
36 * Youngdale). I should also mention the driver written by
37 * Hamish Macdonald for the (GASP!) Amiga A2091 card, included
38 * in the Linux-m68k distribution; it gave me a good initial
39 * understanding of the proper way to run a WD33c93 chip, and I
40 * ended up stealing lots of code from it.
42 * _This_ driver is (I feel) an improvement over the old one in
44 * - All problems relating to the data size of a SCSI request are
45 * gone (as far as I know). The old driver couldn't handle
46 * swapping to partitions because that involved 4k blocks, nor
47 * could it deal with the st.c tape driver unmodified, because
48 * that usually involved 4k - 32k blocks. The old driver never
49 * quite got away from a morbid dependence on 2k block sizes -
50 * which of course is the size of the card's fifo.
52 * - Target Disconnection/Reconnection is now supported. Any
53 * system with more than one device active on the SCSI bus
54 * will benefit from this. The driver defaults to what I'm
55 * calling 'adaptive disconnect' - meaning that each command
56 * is evaluated individually as to whether or not it should
57 * be run with the option to disconnect/reselect (if the
58 * device chooses), or as a "SCSI-bus-hog".
60 * - Synchronous data transfers are now supported. Because there
61 * are a few devices (and many improperly terminated systems)
62 * that choke when doing sync, the default is sync DISABLED
63 * for all devices. This faster protocol can (and should!)
64 * be enabled on selected devices via the command-line.
66 * - Runtime operating parameters can now be specified through
67 * either the LILO or the 'insmod' command line. For LILO do:
68 * "in2000=blah,blah,blah"
69 * and with insmod go like:
70 * "insmod /usr/src/linux/modules/in2000.o setup_strings=blah,blah"
71 * The defaults should be good for most people. See the comment
72 * for 'setup_strings' below for more details.
74 * - The old driver relied exclusively on what the Western Digital
75 * docs call "Combination Level 2 Commands", which are a great
76 * idea in that the CPU is relieved of a lot of interrupt
77 * overhead. However, by accepting a certain (user-settable)
78 * amount of additional interrupts, this driver achieves
79 * better control over the SCSI bus, and data transfers are
80 * almost as fast while being much easier to define, track,
83 * - You can force detection of a card whose BIOS has been disabled.
85 * - Multiple IN2000 cards might almost be supported. I've tried to
86 * keep it in mind, but have no way to test...
90 * tagged queuing. multiple cards.
94 * When using this or any other SCSI driver as a module, you'll
95 * find that with the stock kernel, at most _two_ SCSI hard
96 * drives will be linked into the device list (ie, usable).
97 * If your IN2000 card has more than 2 disks on its bus, you
98 * might want to change the define of 'SD_EXTRA_DEVS' in the
99 * 'hosts.h' file from 2 to whatever is appropriate. It took
100 * me a while to track down this surprisingly obscure and
101 * undocumented little "feature".
104 * People with bug reports, wish-lists, complaints, comments,
105 * or improvements are asked to pah-leeez email me (John Shifflett)
106 * at john@geolog.com or jshiffle@netcom.com! I'm anxious to get
107 * this thing into as good a shape as possible, and I'm positive
108 * there are lots of lurking bugs and "Stupid Places".
110 * Updated for Linux 2.5 by Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk>
111 * - Using new_eh handler
112 * - Hopefully got all the locking right again
113 * See "FIXME" notes for items that could do with more work
116 #include <linux/module.h>
117 #include <linux/blkdev.h>
118 #include <linux/interrupt.h>
119 #include <linux/string.h>
120 #include <linux/delay.h>
121 #include <linux/proc_fs.h>
122 #include <linux/ioport.h>
123 #include <linux/stat.h>
126 #include <asm/system.h>
129 #include <scsi/scsi_host.h>
131 #define IN2000_VERSION "1.33-2.5"
132 #define IN2000_DATE "2002/11/03"
138 * 'setup_strings' is a single string used to pass operating parameters and
139 * settings from the kernel/module command-line to the driver. 'setup_args[]'
140 * is an array of strings that define the compile-time default values for
141 * these settings. If Linux boots with a LILO or insmod command-line, those
142 * settings are combined with 'setup_args[]'. Note that LILO command-lines
143 * are prefixed with "in2000=" while insmod uses a "setup_strings=" prefix.
144 * The driver recognizes the following keywords (lower case required) and
147 * - ioport:addr -Where addr is IO address of a (usually ROM-less) card.
148 * - noreset -No optional args. Prevents SCSI bus reset at boot time.
149 * - nosync:x -x is a bitmask where the 1st 7 bits correspond with
150 * the 7 possible SCSI devices (bit 0 for device #0, etc).
151 * Set a bit to PREVENT sync negotiation on that device.
152 * The driver default is sync DISABLED on all devices.
153 * - period:ns -ns is the minimum # of nanoseconds in a SCSI data transfer
154 * period. Default is 500; acceptable values are 250 - 1000.
155 * - disconnect:x -x = 0 to never allow disconnects, 2 to always allow them.
156 * x = 1 does 'adaptive' disconnects, which is the default
157 * and generally the best choice.
158 * - debug:x -If 'DEBUGGING_ON' is defined, x is a bitmask that causes
159 * various types of debug output to printed - see the DB_xxx
160 * defines in in2000.h
161 * - proc:x -If 'PROC_INTERFACE' is defined, x is a bitmask that
162 * determines how the /proc interface works and what it
163 * does - see the PR_xxx defines in in2000.h
166 * - Numeric arguments can be decimal or the '0x' form of hex notation. There
167 * _must_ be a colon between a keyword and its numeric argument, with no
169 * - Keywords are separated by commas, no spaces, in the standard kernel
170 * command-line manner.
171 * - A keyword in the 'nth' comma-separated command-line member will overwrite
172 * the 'nth' element of setup_args[]. A blank command-line member (in
173 * other words, a comma with no preceding keyword) will _not_ overwrite
174 * the corresponding setup_args[] element.
176 * A few LILO examples (for insmod, use 'setup_strings' instead of 'in2000'):
177 * - in2000=ioport:0x220,noreset
178 * - in2000=period:250,disconnect:2,nosync:0x03
179 * - in2000=debug:0x1e
183 /* Normally, no defaults are specified... */
184 static char *setup_args
[] = { "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" };
186 /* filled in by 'insmod' */
187 static char *setup_strings
;
189 module_param(setup_strings
, charp
, 0);
191 static inline uchar
read_3393(struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
, uchar reg_num
)
193 write1_io(reg_num
, IO_WD_ADDR
);
194 return read1_io(IO_WD_DATA
);
198 #define READ_AUX_STAT() read1_io(IO_WD_ASR)
201 static inline void write_3393(struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
, uchar reg_num
, uchar value
)
203 write1_io(reg_num
, IO_WD_ADDR
);
204 write1_io(value
, IO_WD_DATA
);
208 static inline void write_3393_cmd(struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
, uchar cmd
)
210 /* while (READ_AUX_STAT() & ASR_CIP)
212 write1_io(WD_COMMAND
, IO_WD_ADDR
);
213 write1_io(cmd
, IO_WD_DATA
);
217 static uchar
read_1_byte(struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
)
221 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_CONTROL
, CTRL_IDI
| CTRL_EDI
| CTRL_POLLED
);
222 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_TRANS_INFO
| 0x80);
224 asr
= READ_AUX_STAT();
226 x
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_DATA
);
227 } while (!(asr
& ASR_INT
));
232 static void write_3393_count(struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
, unsigned long value
)
234 write1_io(WD_TRANSFER_COUNT_MSB
, IO_WD_ADDR
);
235 write1_io((value
>> 16), IO_WD_DATA
);
236 write1_io((value
>> 8), IO_WD_DATA
);
237 write1_io(value
, IO_WD_DATA
);
241 static unsigned long read_3393_count(struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
)
245 write1_io(WD_TRANSFER_COUNT_MSB
, IO_WD_ADDR
);
246 value
= read1_io(IO_WD_DATA
) << 16;
247 value
|= read1_io(IO_WD_DATA
) << 8;
248 value
|= read1_io(IO_WD_DATA
);
253 /* The 33c93 needs to be told which direction a command transfers its
254 * data; we use this function to figure it out. Returns true if there
255 * will be a DATA_OUT phase with this command, false otherwise.
256 * (Thanks to Joerg Dorchain for the research and suggestion.)
258 static int is_dir_out(Scsi_Cmnd
* cmd
)
260 switch (cmd
->cmnd
[0]) {
268 case WRITE_VERIFY_12
:
275 case SEARCH_EQUAL_12
:
279 case REASSIGN_BLOCKS
:
284 case SEND_DIAGNOSTIC
:
285 case CHANGE_DEFINITION
:
289 case SEND_VOLUME_TAG
:
299 static struct sx_period sx_table
[] = {
311 static int round_period(unsigned int period
)
315 for (x
= 1; sx_table
[x
].period_ns
; x
++) {
316 if ((period
<= sx_table
[x
- 0].period_ns
) && (period
> sx_table
[x
- 1].period_ns
)) {
323 static uchar
calc_sync_xfer(unsigned int period
, unsigned int offset
)
327 period
*= 4; /* convert SDTR code to ns */
328 result
= sx_table
[round_period(period
)].reg_value
;
329 result
|= (offset
< OPTIMUM_SX_OFF
) ? offset
: OPTIMUM_SX_OFF
;
335 static void in2000_execute(struct Scsi_Host
*instance
);
337 static int in2000_queuecommand_lck(Scsi_Cmnd
* cmd
, void (*done
) (Scsi_Cmnd
*))
339 struct Scsi_Host
*instance
;
340 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
;
343 instance
= cmd
->device
->host
;
344 hostdata
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) instance
->hostdata
;
346 DB(DB_QUEUE_COMMAND
, scmd_printk(KERN_DEBUG
, cmd
, "Q-%02x(", cmd
->cmnd
[0]))
348 /* Set up a few fields in the Scsi_Cmnd structure for our own use:
349 * - host_scribble is the pointer to the next cmd in the input queue
350 * - scsi_done points to the routine we call when a cmd is finished
351 * - result is what you'd expect
353 cmd
->host_scribble
= NULL
;
354 cmd
->scsi_done
= done
;
357 /* We use the Scsi_Pointer structure that's included with each command
358 * as a scratchpad (as it's intended to be used!). The handy thing about
359 * the SCp.xxx fields is that they're always associated with a given
360 * cmd, and are preserved across disconnect-reselect. This means we
361 * can pretty much ignore SAVE_POINTERS and RESTORE_POINTERS messages
362 * if we keep all the critical pointers and counters in SCp:
363 * - SCp.ptr is the pointer into the RAM buffer
364 * - SCp.this_residual is the size of that buffer
365 * - SCp.buffer points to the current scatter-gather buffer
366 * - SCp.buffers_residual tells us how many S.G. buffers there are
367 * - SCp.have_data_in helps keep track of >2048 byte transfers
368 * - SCp.sent_command is not used
369 * - SCp.phase records this command's SRCID_ER bit setting
372 if (scsi_bufflen(cmd
)) {
373 cmd
->SCp
.buffer
= scsi_sglist(cmd
);
374 cmd
->SCp
.buffers_residual
= scsi_sg_count(cmd
) - 1;
375 cmd
->SCp
.ptr
= sg_virt(cmd
->SCp
.buffer
);
376 cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
= cmd
->SCp
.buffer
->length
;
378 cmd
->SCp
.buffer
= NULL
;
379 cmd
->SCp
.buffers_residual
= 0;
381 cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
= 0;
383 cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
= 0;
385 /* We don't set SCp.phase here - that's done in in2000_execute() */
387 /* WD docs state that at the conclusion of a "LEVEL2" command, the
388 * status byte can be retrieved from the LUN register. Apparently,
389 * this is the case only for *uninterrupted* LEVEL2 commands! If
390 * there are any unexpected phases entered, even if they are 100%
391 * legal (different devices may choose to do things differently),
392 * the LEVEL2 command sequence is exited. This often occurs prior
393 * to receiving the status byte, in which case the driver does a
394 * status phase interrupt and gets the status byte on its own.
395 * While such a command can then be "resumed" (ie restarted to
396 * finish up as a LEVEL2 command), the LUN register will NOT be
397 * a valid status byte at the command's conclusion, and we must
398 * use the byte obtained during the earlier interrupt. Here, we
399 * preset SCp.Status to an illegal value (0xff) so that when
400 * this command finally completes, we can tell where the actual
401 * status byte is stored.
404 cmd
->SCp
.Status
= ILLEGAL_STATUS_BYTE
;
406 /* We need to disable interrupts before messing with the input
407 * queue and calling in2000_execute().
411 * Add the cmd to the end of 'input_Q'. Note that REQUEST_SENSE
412 * commands are added to the head of the queue so that the desired
413 * sense data is not lost before REQUEST_SENSE executes.
416 if (!(hostdata
->input_Q
) || (cmd
->cmnd
[0] == REQUEST_SENSE
)) {
417 cmd
->host_scribble
= (uchar
*) hostdata
->input_Q
;
418 hostdata
->input_Q
= cmd
;
419 } else { /* find the end of the queue */
420 for (tmp
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->input_Q
; tmp
->host_scribble
; tmp
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) tmp
->host_scribble
);
421 tmp
->host_scribble
= (uchar
*) cmd
;
424 /* We know that there's at least one command in 'input_Q' now.
425 * Go see if any of them are runnable!
428 in2000_execute(cmd
->device
->host
);
430 DB(DB_QUEUE_COMMAND
, printk(")Q "))
434 static DEF_SCSI_QCMD(in2000_queuecommand
)
439 * This routine attempts to start a scsi command. If the host_card is
440 * already connected, we give up immediately. Otherwise, look through
441 * the input_Q, using the first command we find that's intended
442 * for a currently non-busy target/lun.
443 * Note that this function is always called with interrupts already
444 * disabled (either from in2000_queuecommand() or in2000_intr()).
446 static void in2000_execute(struct Scsi_Host
*instance
)
448 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
;
449 Scsi_Cmnd
*cmd
, *prev
;
453 unsigned short flushbuf
[16];
456 hostdata
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) instance
->hostdata
;
458 DB(DB_EXECUTE
, printk("EX("))
460 if (hostdata
->selecting
|| hostdata
->connected
) {
462 DB(DB_EXECUTE
, printk(")EX-0 "))
468 * Search through the input_Q for a command destined
469 * for an idle target/lun.
472 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->input_Q
;
475 if (!(hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] & (1 << cmd
->device
->lun
)))
478 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) cmd
->host_scribble
;
481 /* quit if queue empty or all possible targets are busy */
485 DB(DB_EXECUTE
, printk(")EX-1 "))
490 /* remove command from queue */
493 prev
->host_scribble
= cmd
->host_scribble
;
495 hostdata
->input_Q
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) cmd
->host_scribble
;
497 #ifdef PROC_STATISTICS
498 hostdata
->cmd_cnt
[cmd
->device
->id
]++;
502 * Start the selection process
506 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_DESTINATION_ID
, cmd
->device
->id
);
508 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_DESTINATION_ID
, cmd
->device
->id
| DSTID_DPD
);
510 /* Now we need to figure out whether or not this command is a good
511 * candidate for disconnect/reselect. We guess to the best of our
512 * ability, based on a set of hierarchical rules. When several
513 * devices are operating simultaneously, disconnects are usually
514 * an advantage. In a single device system, or if only 1 device
515 * is being accessed, transfers usually go faster if disconnects
518 * + Commands should NEVER disconnect if hostdata->disconnect =
519 * DIS_NEVER (this holds for tape drives also), and ALWAYS
520 * disconnect if hostdata->disconnect = DIS_ALWAYS.
521 * + Tape drive commands should always be allowed to disconnect.
522 * + Disconnect should be allowed if disconnected_Q isn't empty.
523 * + Commands should NOT disconnect if input_Q is empty.
524 * + Disconnect should be allowed if there are commands in input_Q
525 * for a different target/lun. In this case, the other commands
526 * should be made disconnect-able, if not already.
528 * I know, I know - this code would flunk me out of any
529 * "C Programming 101" class ever offered. But it's easy
530 * to change around and experiment with for now.
533 cmd
->SCp
.phase
= 0; /* assume no disconnect */
534 if (hostdata
->disconnect
== DIS_NEVER
)
536 if (hostdata
->disconnect
== DIS_ALWAYS
)
538 if (cmd
->device
->type
== 1) /* tape drive? */
540 if (hostdata
->disconnected_Q
) /* other commands disconnected? */
542 if (!(hostdata
->input_Q
)) /* input_Q empty? */
544 for (prev
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->input_Q
; prev
; prev
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) prev
->host_scribble
) {
545 if ((prev
->device
->id
!= cmd
->device
->id
) || (prev
->device
->lun
!= cmd
->device
->lun
)) {
546 for (prev
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->input_Q
; prev
; prev
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) prev
->host_scribble
)
556 #ifdef PROC_STATISTICS
557 hostdata
->disc_allowed_cnt
[cmd
->device
->id
]++;
561 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_SOURCE_ID
, ((cmd
->SCp
.phase
) ? SRCID_ER
: 0));
563 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_TARGET_LUN
, cmd
->device
->lun
);
564 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_SYNCHRONOUS_TRANSFER
, hostdata
->sync_xfer
[cmd
->device
->id
]);
565 hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] |= (1 << cmd
->device
->lun
);
567 if ((hostdata
->level2
<= L2_NONE
) || (hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] == SS_UNSET
)) {
570 * Do a 'Select-With-ATN' command. This will end with
571 * one of the following interrupts:
572 * CSR_RESEL_AM: failure - can try again later.
573 * CSR_TIMEOUT: failure - give up.
574 * CSR_SELECT: success - proceed.
577 hostdata
->selecting
= cmd
;
579 /* Every target has its own synchronous transfer setting, kept in
580 * the sync_xfer array, and a corresponding status byte in sync_stat[].
581 * Each target's sync_stat[] entry is initialized to SS_UNSET, and its
582 * sync_xfer[] entry is initialized to the default/safe value. SS_UNSET
583 * means that the parameters are undetermined as yet, and that we
584 * need to send an SDTR message to this device after selection is
585 * complete. We set SS_FIRST to tell the interrupt routine to do so,
586 * unless we don't want to even _try_ synchronous transfers: In this
587 * case we set SS_SET to make the defaults final.
589 if (hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] == SS_UNSET
) {
590 if (hostdata
->sync_off
& (1 << cmd
->device
->id
))
591 hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] = SS_SET
;
593 hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] = SS_FIRST
;
595 hostdata
->state
= S_SELECTING
;
596 write_3393_count(hostdata
, 0); /* this guarantees a DATA_PHASE interrupt */
597 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_SEL_ATN
);
603 * Do a 'Select-With-ATN-Xfer' command. This will end with
604 * one of the following interrupts:
605 * CSR_RESEL_AM: failure - can try again later.
606 * CSR_TIMEOUT: failure - give up.
607 * anything else: success - proceed.
610 hostdata
->connected
= cmd
;
611 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND_PHASE
, 0);
613 /* copy command_descriptor_block into WD chip
614 * (take advantage of auto-incrementing)
617 write1_io(WD_CDB_1
, IO_WD_ADDR
);
618 for (i
= 0; i
< cmd
->cmd_len
; i
++)
619 write1_io(cmd
->cmnd
[i
], IO_WD_DATA
);
621 /* The wd33c93 only knows about Group 0, 1, and 5 commands when
622 * it's doing a 'select-and-transfer'. To be safe, we write the
623 * size of the CDB into the OWN_ID register for every case. This
624 * way there won't be problems with vendor-unique, audio, etc.
627 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_OWN_ID
, cmd
->cmd_len
);
629 /* When doing a non-disconnect command, we can save ourselves a DATA
630 * phase interrupt later by setting everything up now. With writes we
631 * need to pre-fill the fifo; if there's room for the 32 flush bytes,
632 * put them in there too - that'll avoid a fifo interrupt. Reads are
634 * KLUDGE NOTE: It seems that you can't completely fill the fifo here:
635 * This results in the IO_FIFO_COUNT register rolling over to zero,
636 * and apparently the gate array logic sees this as empty, not full,
637 * so the 3393 chip is never signalled to start reading from the
638 * fifo. Or maybe it's seen as a permanent fifo interrupt condition.
639 * Regardless, we fix this by temporarily pretending that the fifo
640 * is 16 bytes smaller. (I see now that the old driver has a comment
641 * about "don't fill completely" in an analogous place - must be the
642 * same deal.) This results in CDROM, swap partitions, and tape drives
643 * needing an extra interrupt per write command - I think we can live
647 if (!(cmd
->SCp
.phase
)) {
648 write_3393_count(hostdata
, cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
);
649 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_CONTROL
, CTRL_IDI
| CTRL_EDI
| CTRL_BUS
);
650 write1_io(0, IO_FIFO_WRITE
); /* clear fifo counter, write mode */
652 if (is_dir_out(cmd
)) {
653 hostdata
->fifo
= FI_FIFO_WRITING
;
654 if ((i
= cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
) > (IN2000_FIFO_SIZE
- 16))
655 i
= IN2000_FIFO_SIZE
- 16;
656 cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
= i
; /* this much data in fifo */
657 i
>>= 1; /* Gulp. Assuming modulo 2. */
658 sp
= (unsigned short *) cmd
->SCp
.ptr
;
659 f
= hostdata
->io_base
+ IO_FIFO
;
666 write2_io(*sp
++, IO_FIFO
);
670 /* Is there room for the flush bytes? */
672 if (cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
<= ((IN2000_FIFO_SIZE
- 16) - 32)) {
681 write2_io(0, IO_FIFO
);
689 write1_io(0, IO_FIFO_READ
); /* put fifo in read mode */
690 hostdata
->fifo
= FI_FIFO_READING
;
691 cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
= 0; /* nothing transferred yet */
695 write_3393_count(hostdata
, 0); /* this guarantees a DATA_PHASE interrupt */
697 hostdata
->state
= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
;
698 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_SEL_ATN_XFER
);
702 * Since the SCSI bus can handle only 1 connection at a time,
703 * we get out of here now. If the selection fails, or when
704 * the command disconnects, we'll come back to this routine
705 * to search the input_Q again...
708 DB(DB_EXECUTE
, printk("%s)EX-2 ", (cmd
->SCp
.phase
) ? "d:" : ""))
714 static void transfer_pio(uchar
* buf
, int cnt
, int data_in_dir
, struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
)
718 DB(DB_TRANSFER
, printk("(%p,%d,%s)", buf
, cnt
, data_in_dir
? "in" : "out"))
720 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_CONTROL
, CTRL_IDI
| CTRL_EDI
| CTRL_POLLED
);
721 write_3393_count(hostdata
, cnt
);
722 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_TRANS_INFO
);
725 asr
= READ_AUX_STAT();
727 *buf
++ = read_3393(hostdata
, WD_DATA
);
728 } while (!(asr
& ASR_INT
));
731 asr
= READ_AUX_STAT();
733 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_DATA
, *buf
++);
734 } while (!(asr
& ASR_INT
));
737 /* Note: we are returning with the interrupt UN-cleared.
738 * Since (presumably) an entire I/O operation has
739 * completed, the bus phase is probably different, and
740 * the interrupt routine will discover this when it
741 * responds to the uncleared int.
748 static void transfer_bytes(Scsi_Cmnd
* cmd
, int data_in_dir
)
750 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
;
755 hostdata
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) cmd
->device
->host
->hostdata
;
757 /* Normally, you'd expect 'this_residual' to be non-zero here.
758 * In a series of scatter-gather transfers, however, this
759 * routine will usually be called with 'this_residual' equal
760 * to 0 and 'buffers_residual' non-zero. This means that a
761 * previous transfer completed, clearing 'this_residual', and
762 * now we need to setup the next scatter-gather buffer as the
763 * source or destination for THIS transfer.
765 if (!cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
&& cmd
->SCp
.buffers_residual
) {
767 --cmd
->SCp
.buffers_residual
;
768 cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
= cmd
->SCp
.buffer
->length
;
769 cmd
->SCp
.ptr
= sg_virt(cmd
->SCp
.buffer
);
772 /* Set up hardware registers */
774 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_SYNCHRONOUS_TRANSFER
, hostdata
->sync_xfer
[cmd
->device
->id
]);
775 write_3393_count(hostdata
, cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
);
776 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_CONTROL
, CTRL_IDI
| CTRL_EDI
| CTRL_BUS
);
777 write1_io(0, IO_FIFO_WRITE
); /* zero counter, assume write */
779 /* Reading is easy. Just issue the command and return - we'll
780 * get an interrupt later when we have actual data to worry about.
784 write1_io(0, IO_FIFO_READ
);
785 if ((hostdata
->level2
>= L2_DATA
) || (hostdata
->level2
== L2_BASIC
&& cmd
->SCp
.phase
== 0)) {
786 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND_PHASE
, 0x45);
787 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_SEL_ATN_XFER
);
788 hostdata
->state
= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
;
790 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_TRANS_INFO
);
791 hostdata
->fifo
= FI_FIFO_READING
;
792 cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
= 0;
796 /* Writing is more involved - we'll start the WD chip and write as
797 * much data to the fifo as we can right now. Later interrupts will
798 * write any bytes that don't make it at this stage.
801 if ((hostdata
->level2
>= L2_DATA
) || (hostdata
->level2
== L2_BASIC
&& cmd
->SCp
.phase
== 0)) {
802 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND_PHASE
, 0x45);
803 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_SEL_ATN_XFER
);
804 hostdata
->state
= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
;
806 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_TRANS_INFO
);
807 hostdata
->fifo
= FI_FIFO_WRITING
;
808 sp
= (unsigned short *) cmd
->SCp
.ptr
;
810 if ((i
= cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
) > IN2000_FIFO_SIZE
)
811 i
= IN2000_FIFO_SIZE
;
812 cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
= i
;
813 i
>>= 1; /* Gulp. We assume this_residual is modulo 2 */
814 f
= hostdata
->io_base
+ IO_FIFO
;
821 write2_io(*sp
++, IO_FIFO
);
828 /* We need to use spin_lock_irqsave() & spin_unlock_irqrestore() in this
829 * function in order to work in an SMP environment. (I'd be surprised
830 * if the driver is ever used by anyone on a real multi-CPU motherboard,
831 * but it _does_ need to be able to compile and run in an SMP kernel.)
834 static irqreturn_t
in2000_intr(int irqnum
, void *dev_id
)
836 struct Scsi_Host
*instance
= dev_id
;
837 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
;
838 Scsi_Cmnd
*patch
, *cmd
;
839 uchar asr
, sr
, phs
, id
, lun
, *ucp
, msg
;
841 unsigned long length
;
846 hostdata
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) instance
->hostdata
;
848 /* Get the spin_lock and disable further ints, for SMP */
850 spin_lock_irqsave(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
852 #ifdef PROC_STATISTICS
856 /* The IN2000 card has 2 interrupt sources OR'ed onto its IRQ line - the
857 * WD3393 chip and the 2k fifo (which is actually a dual-port RAM combined
858 * with a big logic array, so it's a little different than what you might
859 * expect). As far as I know, there's no reason that BOTH can't be active
860 * at the same time, but there's a problem: while we can read the 3393
861 * to tell if _it_ wants an interrupt, I don't know of a way to ask the
862 * fifo the same question. The best we can do is check the 3393 and if
863 * it _isn't_ the source of the interrupt, then we can be pretty sure
864 * that the fifo is the culprit.
865 * UPDATE: I have it on good authority (Bill Earnest) that bit 0 of the
866 * IO_FIFO_COUNT register mirrors the fifo interrupt state. I
867 * assume that bit clear means interrupt active. As it turns
868 * out, the driver really doesn't need to check for this after
869 * all, so my remarks above about a 'problem' can safely be
870 * ignored. The way the logic is set up, there's no advantage
871 * (that I can see) to worrying about it.
873 * It seems that the fifo interrupt signal is negated when we extract
874 * bytes during read or write bytes during write.
875 * - fifo will interrupt when data is moving from it to the 3393, and
876 * there are 31 (or less?) bytes left to go. This is sort of short-
877 * sighted: what if you don't WANT to do more? In any case, our
878 * response is to push more into the fifo - either actual data or
879 * dummy bytes if need be. Note that we apparently have to write at
880 * least 32 additional bytes to the fifo after an interrupt in order
881 * to get it to release the ones it was holding on to - writing fewer
882 * than 32 will result in another fifo int.
883 * UPDATE: Again, info from Bill Earnest makes this more understandable:
884 * 32 bytes = two counts of the fifo counter register. He tells
885 * me that the fifo interrupt is a non-latching signal derived
886 * from a straightforward boolean interpretation of the 7
887 * highest bits of the fifo counter and the fifo-read/fifo-write
888 * state. Who'd a thought?
891 write1_io(0, IO_LED_ON
);
892 asr
= READ_AUX_STAT();
893 if (!(asr
& ASR_INT
)) { /* no WD33c93 interrupt? */
895 /* Ok. This is definitely a FIFO-only interrupt.
897 * If FI_FIFO_READING is set, there are up to 2048 bytes waiting to be read,
898 * maybe more to come from the SCSI bus. Read as many as we can out of the
899 * fifo and into memory at the location of SCp.ptr[SCp.have_data_in], and
900 * update have_data_in afterwards.
902 * If we have FI_FIFO_WRITING, the FIFO has almost run out of bytes to move
903 * into the WD3393 chip (I think the interrupt happens when there are 31
904 * bytes left, but it may be fewer...). The 3393 is still waiting, so we
905 * shove some more into the fifo, which gets things moving again. If the
906 * original SCSI command specified more than 2048 bytes, there may still
907 * be some of that data left: fine - use it (from SCp.ptr[SCp.have_data_in]).
908 * Don't forget to update have_data_in. If we've already written out the
909 * entire buffer, feed 32 dummy bytes to the fifo - they're needed to
910 * push out the remaining real data.
911 * (Big thanks to Bill Earnest for getting me out of the mud in here.)
914 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->connected
; /* assume we're connected */
915 CHECK_NULL(cmd
, "fifo_int")
917 if (hostdata
->fifo
== FI_FIFO_READING
) {
919 DB(DB_FIFO
, printk("{R:%02x} ", read1_io(IO_FIFO_COUNT
)))
921 sp
= (unsigned short *) (cmd
->SCp
.ptr
+ cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
);
922 i
= read1_io(IO_FIFO_COUNT
) & 0xfe;
923 i
<<= 2; /* # of words waiting in the fifo */
924 f
= hostdata
->io_base
+ IO_FIFO
;
931 *sp
++ = read2_io(IO_FIFO
);
935 i
= sp
- (unsigned short *) (cmd
->SCp
.ptr
+ cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
);
937 cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
+= i
;
940 else if (hostdata
->fifo
== FI_FIFO_WRITING
) {
942 DB(DB_FIFO
, printk("{W:%02x} ", read1_io(IO_FIFO_COUNT
)))
944 /* If all bytes have been written to the fifo, flush out the stragglers.
945 * Note that while writing 16 dummy words seems arbitrary, we don't
946 * have another choice that I can see. What we really want is to read
947 * the 3393 transfer count register (that would tell us how many bytes
948 * needed flushing), but the TRANSFER_INFO command hasn't completed
949 * yet (not enough bytes!) and that register won't be accessible. So,
950 * we use 16 words - a number obtained through trial and error.
951 * UPDATE: Bill says this is exactly what Always does, so there.
952 * More thanks due him for help in this section.
954 if (cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
== cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
) {
956 while (i
--) /* write 32 dummy bytes */
957 write2_io(0, IO_FIFO
);
960 /* If there are still bytes left in the SCSI buffer, write as many as we
961 * can out to the fifo.
965 sp
= (unsigned short *) (cmd
->SCp
.ptr
+ cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
);
966 i
= cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
- cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
; /* bytes yet to go */
967 j
= read1_io(IO_FIFO_COUNT
) & 0xfe;
968 j
<<= 2; /* how many words the fifo has room for */
972 write2_io(*sp
++, IO_FIFO
);
974 i
= sp
- (unsigned short *) (cmd
->SCp
.ptr
+ cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
);
976 cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
+= i
;
981 printk("*** Spurious FIFO interrupt ***");
984 write1_io(0, IO_LED_OFF
);
986 /* release the SMP spin_lock and restore irq state */
987 spin_unlock_irqrestore(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
991 /* This interrupt was triggered by the WD33c93 chip. The fifo interrupt
992 * may also be asserted, but we don't bother to check it: we get more
993 * detailed info from FIFO_READING and FIFO_WRITING (see below).
996 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->connected
; /* assume we're connected */
997 sr
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_SCSI_STATUS
); /* clear the interrupt */
998 phs
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND_PHASE
);
1000 if (!cmd
&& (sr
!= CSR_RESEL_AM
&& sr
!= CSR_TIMEOUT
&& sr
!= CSR_SELECT
)) {
1001 printk("\nNR:wd-intr-1\n");
1002 write1_io(0, IO_LED_OFF
);
1004 /* release the SMP spin_lock and restore irq state */
1005 spin_unlock_irqrestore(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
1009 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("{%02x:%02x-", asr
, sr
))
1011 /* After starting a FIFO-based transfer, the next _WD3393_ interrupt is
1012 * guaranteed to be in response to the completion of the transfer.
1013 * If we were reading, there's probably data in the fifo that needs
1014 * to be copied into RAM - do that here. Also, we have to update
1015 * 'this_residual' and 'ptr' based on the contents of the
1016 * TRANSFER_COUNT register, in case the device decided to do an
1017 * intermediate disconnect (a device may do this if it has to
1018 * do a seek, or just to be nice and let other devices have
1019 * some bus time during long transfers).
1020 * After doing whatever is necessary with the fifo, we go on and
1021 * service the WD3393 interrupt normally.
1023 if (hostdata
->fifo
== FI_FIFO_READING
) {
1025 /* buffer index = start-of-buffer + #-of-bytes-already-read */
1027 sp
= (unsigned short *) (cmd
->SCp
.ptr
+ cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
);
1029 /* bytes remaining in fifo = (total-wanted - #-not-got) - #-already-read */
1031 i
= (cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
- read_3393_count(hostdata
)) - cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
;
1032 i
>>= 1; /* Gulp. We assume this will always be modulo 2 */
1033 f
= hostdata
->io_base
+ IO_FIFO
;
1040 *sp
++ = read2_io(IO_FIFO
);
1044 hostdata
->fifo
= FI_FIFO_UNUSED
;
1045 length
= cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
;
1046 cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
= read_3393_count(hostdata
);
1047 cmd
->SCp
.ptr
+= (length
- cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
);
1049 DB(DB_TRANSFER
, printk("(%p,%d)", cmd
->SCp
.ptr
, cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
))
1053 else if (hostdata
->fifo
== FI_FIFO_WRITING
) {
1054 hostdata
->fifo
= FI_FIFO_UNUSED
;
1055 length
= cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
;
1056 cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
= read_3393_count(hostdata
);
1057 cmd
->SCp
.ptr
+= (length
- cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
);
1059 DB(DB_TRANSFER
, printk("(%p,%d)", cmd
->SCp
.ptr
, cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
))
1063 /* Respond to the specific WD3393 interrupt - there are quite a few! */
1068 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("TIMEOUT"))
1070 if (hostdata
->state
== S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
)
1071 hostdata
->connected
= NULL
;
1073 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->selecting
; /* get a valid cmd */
1074 CHECK_NULL(cmd
, "csr_timeout")
1075 hostdata
->selecting
= NULL
;
1078 cmd
->result
= DID_NO_CONNECT
<< 16;
1079 hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] &= ~(1 << cmd
->device
->lun
);
1080 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1081 cmd
->scsi_done(cmd
);
1083 /* We are not connected to a target - check to see if there
1084 * are commands waiting to be executed.
1087 in2000_execute(instance
);
1091 /* Note: this interrupt should not occur in a LEVEL2 command */
1094 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("SELECT"))
1095 hostdata
->connected
= cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->selecting
;
1096 CHECK_NULL(cmd
, "csr_select")
1097 hostdata
->selecting
= NULL
;
1099 /* construct an IDENTIFY message with correct disconnect bit */
1101 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[0] = (0x80 | 0x00 | cmd
->device
->lun
);
1103 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[0] |= 0x40;
1105 if (hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] == SS_FIRST
) {
1107 printk(" sending SDTR ");
1110 hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] = SS_WAITING
;
1112 /* tack on a 2nd message to ask about synchronous transfers */
1114 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[1] = EXTENDED_MESSAGE
;
1115 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[2] = 3;
1116 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[3] = EXTENDED_SDTR
;
1117 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[4] = OPTIMUM_SX_PER
/ 4;
1118 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[5] = OPTIMUM_SX_OFF
;
1119 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 6;
1121 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 1;
1123 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1127 case CSR_XFER_DONE
| PHS_DATA_IN
:
1128 case CSR_UNEXP
| PHS_DATA_IN
:
1129 case CSR_SRV_REQ
| PHS_DATA_IN
:
1130 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("IN-%d.%d", cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
, cmd
->SCp
.buffers_residual
))
1131 transfer_bytes(cmd
, DATA_IN_DIR
);
1132 if (hostdata
->state
!= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
)
1133 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1137 case CSR_XFER_DONE
| PHS_DATA_OUT
:
1138 case CSR_UNEXP
| PHS_DATA_OUT
:
1139 case CSR_SRV_REQ
| PHS_DATA_OUT
:
1140 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("OUT-%d.%d", cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
, cmd
->SCp
.buffers_residual
))
1141 transfer_bytes(cmd
, DATA_OUT_DIR
);
1142 if (hostdata
->state
!= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
)
1143 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1147 /* Note: this interrupt should not occur in a LEVEL2 command */
1149 case CSR_XFER_DONE
| PHS_COMMAND
:
1150 case CSR_UNEXP
| PHS_COMMAND
:
1151 case CSR_SRV_REQ
| PHS_COMMAND
:
1152 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("CMND-%02x", cmd
->cmnd
[0]))
1153 transfer_pio(cmd
->cmnd
, cmd
->cmd_len
, DATA_OUT_DIR
, hostdata
);
1154 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1158 case CSR_XFER_DONE
| PHS_STATUS
:
1159 case CSR_UNEXP
| PHS_STATUS
:
1160 case CSR_SRV_REQ
| PHS_STATUS
:
1161 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("STATUS="))
1163 cmd
->SCp
.Status
= read_1_byte(hostdata
);
1164 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("%02x", cmd
->SCp
.Status
))
1165 if (hostdata
->level2
>= L2_BASIC
) {
1166 sr
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_SCSI_STATUS
); /* clear interrupt */
1167 hostdata
->state
= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
;
1168 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND_PHASE
, 0x50);
1169 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_SEL_ATN_XFER
);
1171 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1176 case CSR_XFER_DONE
| PHS_MESS_IN
:
1177 case CSR_UNEXP
| PHS_MESS_IN
:
1178 case CSR_SRV_REQ
| PHS_MESS_IN
:
1179 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("MSG_IN="))
1181 msg
= read_1_byte(hostdata
);
1182 sr
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_SCSI_STATUS
); /* clear interrupt */
1184 hostdata
->incoming_msg
[hostdata
->incoming_ptr
] = msg
;
1185 if (hostdata
->incoming_msg
[0] == EXTENDED_MESSAGE
)
1186 msg
= EXTENDED_MESSAGE
;
1188 hostdata
->incoming_ptr
= 0;
1190 cmd
->SCp
.Message
= msg
;
1193 case COMMAND_COMPLETE
:
1194 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("CCMP"))
1195 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1196 hostdata
->state
= S_PRE_CMP_DISC
;
1200 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("SDP"))
1201 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1202 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1205 case RESTORE_POINTERS
:
1206 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("RDP"))
1207 if (hostdata
->level2
>= L2_BASIC
) {
1208 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND_PHASE
, 0x45);
1209 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_SEL_ATN_XFER
);
1210 hostdata
->state
= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
;
1212 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1213 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1218 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("DIS"))
1219 cmd
->device
->disconnect
= 1;
1220 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1221 hostdata
->state
= S_PRE_TMP_DISC
;
1224 case MESSAGE_REJECT
:
1225 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("REJ"))
1229 if (hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] == SS_WAITING
)
1230 hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] = SS_SET
;
1231 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1232 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1235 case EXTENDED_MESSAGE
:
1236 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("EXT"))
1238 ucp
= hostdata
->incoming_msg
;
1241 printk("%02x", ucp
[hostdata
->incoming_ptr
]);
1243 /* Is this the last byte of the extended message? */
1245 if ((hostdata
->incoming_ptr
>= 2) && (hostdata
->incoming_ptr
== (ucp
[1] + 1))) {
1247 switch (ucp
[2]) { /* what's the EXTENDED code? */
1249 id
= calc_sync_xfer(ucp
[3], ucp
[4]);
1250 if (hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] != SS_WAITING
) {
1252 /* A device has sent an unsolicited SDTR message; rather than go
1253 * through the effort of decoding it and then figuring out what
1254 * our reply should be, we're just gonna say that we have a
1255 * synchronous fifo depth of 0. This will result in asynchronous
1256 * transfers - not ideal but so much easier.
1257 * Actually, this is OK because it assures us that if we don't
1258 * specifically ask for sync transfers, we won't do any.
1261 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_ASSERT_ATN
); /* want MESS_OUT */
1262 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[0] = EXTENDED_MESSAGE
;
1263 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[1] = 3;
1264 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[2] = EXTENDED_SDTR
;
1265 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[3] = hostdata
->default_sx_per
/ 4;
1266 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[4] = 0;
1267 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 5;
1268 hostdata
->sync_xfer
[cmd
->device
->id
] = calc_sync_xfer(hostdata
->default_sx_per
/ 4, 0);
1270 hostdata
->sync_xfer
[cmd
->device
->id
] = id
;
1273 printk("sync_xfer=%02x", hostdata
->sync_xfer
[cmd
->device
->id
]);
1275 hostdata
->sync_stat
[cmd
->device
->id
] = SS_SET
;
1276 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1277 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1280 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_ASSERT_ATN
); /* want MESS_OUT */
1281 printk("sending WDTR ");
1282 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[0] = EXTENDED_MESSAGE
;
1283 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[1] = 2;
1284 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[2] = EXTENDED_WDTR
;
1285 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[3] = 0; /* 8 bit transfer width */
1286 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 4;
1287 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1288 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1291 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_ASSERT_ATN
); /* want MESS_OUT */
1292 printk("Rejecting Unknown Extended Message(%02x). ", ucp
[2]);
1293 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[0] = MESSAGE_REJECT
;
1294 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 1;
1295 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1296 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1299 hostdata
->incoming_ptr
= 0;
1302 /* We need to read more MESS_IN bytes for the extended message */
1305 hostdata
->incoming_ptr
++;
1306 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1307 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1312 printk("Rejecting Unknown Message(%02x) ", msg
);
1313 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_ASSERT_ATN
); /* want MESS_OUT */
1314 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[0] = MESSAGE_REJECT
;
1315 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 1;
1316 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1317 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1322 /* Note: this interrupt will occur only after a LEVEL2 command */
1324 case CSR_SEL_XFER_DONE
:
1326 /* Make sure that reselection is enabled at this point - it may
1327 * have been turned off for the command that just completed.
1330 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_SOURCE_ID
, SRCID_ER
);
1332 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("SX-DONE"))
1333 cmd
->SCp
.Message
= COMMAND_COMPLETE
;
1334 lun
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_TARGET_LUN
);
1335 DB(DB_INTR
, printk(":%d.%d", cmd
->SCp
.Status
, lun
))
1336 hostdata
->connected
= NULL
;
1337 hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] &= ~(1 << cmd
->device
->lun
);
1338 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1339 if (cmd
->SCp
.Status
== ILLEGAL_STATUS_BYTE
)
1340 cmd
->SCp
.Status
= lun
;
1341 if (cmd
->cmnd
[0] == REQUEST_SENSE
&& cmd
->SCp
.Status
!= GOOD
)
1342 cmd
->result
= (cmd
->result
& 0x00ffff) | (DID_ERROR
<< 16);
1344 cmd
->result
= cmd
->SCp
.Status
| (cmd
->SCp
.Message
<< 8);
1345 cmd
->scsi_done(cmd
);
1347 /* We are no longer connected to a target - check to see if
1348 * there are commands waiting to be executed.
1351 in2000_execute(instance
);
1353 printk("%02x:%02x:%02x: Unknown SEL_XFER_DONE phase!!---", asr
, sr
, phs
);
1358 /* Note: this interrupt will occur only after a LEVEL2 command */
1361 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("SDP"))
1362 hostdata
->state
= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
;
1363 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND_PHASE
, 0x41);
1364 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_SEL_ATN_XFER
);
1368 case CSR_XFER_DONE
| PHS_MESS_OUT
:
1369 case CSR_UNEXP
| PHS_MESS_OUT
:
1370 case CSR_SRV_REQ
| PHS_MESS_OUT
:
1371 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("MSG_OUT="))
1373 /* To get here, we've probably requested MESSAGE_OUT and have
1374 * already put the correct bytes in outgoing_msg[] and filled
1375 * in outgoing_len. We simply send them out to the SCSI bus.
1376 * Sometimes we get MESSAGE_OUT phase when we're not expecting
1377 * it - like when our SDTR message is rejected by a target. Some
1378 * targets send the REJECT before receiving all of the extended
1379 * message, and then seem to go back to MESSAGE_OUT for a byte
1380 * or two. Not sure why, or if I'm doing something wrong to
1381 * cause this to happen. Regardless, it seems that sending
1382 * NOP messages in these situations results in no harm and
1383 * makes everyone happy.
1385 if (hostdata
->outgoing_len
== 0) {
1386 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 1;
1387 hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[0] = NOP
;
1389 transfer_pio(hostdata
->outgoing_msg
, hostdata
->outgoing_len
, DATA_OUT_DIR
, hostdata
);
1390 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("%02x", hostdata
->outgoing_msg
[0]))
1391 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 0;
1392 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1396 case CSR_UNEXP_DISC
:
1398 /* I think I've seen this after a request-sense that was in response
1399 * to an error condition, but not sure. We certainly need to do
1400 * something when we get this interrupt - the question is 'what?'.
1401 * Let's think positively, and assume some command has finished
1402 * in a legal manner (like a command that provokes a request-sense),
1403 * so we treat it as a normal command-complete-disconnect.
1407 /* Make sure that reselection is enabled at this point - it may
1408 * have been turned off for the command that just completed.
1411 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_SOURCE_ID
, SRCID_ER
);
1413 printk(" - Already disconnected! ");
1414 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1416 /* release the SMP spin_lock and restore irq state */
1417 spin_unlock_irqrestore(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
1420 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("UNEXP_DISC"))
1421 hostdata
->connected
= NULL
;
1422 hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] &= ~(1 << cmd
->device
->lun
);
1423 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1424 if (cmd
->cmnd
[0] == REQUEST_SENSE
&& cmd
->SCp
.Status
!= GOOD
)
1425 cmd
->result
= (cmd
->result
& 0x00ffff) | (DID_ERROR
<< 16);
1427 cmd
->result
= cmd
->SCp
.Status
| (cmd
->SCp
.Message
<< 8);
1428 cmd
->scsi_done(cmd
);
1430 /* We are no longer connected to a target - check to see if
1431 * there are commands waiting to be executed.
1434 in2000_execute(instance
);
1440 /* Make sure that reselection is enabled at this point - it may
1441 * have been turned off for the command that just completed.
1444 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_SOURCE_ID
, SRCID_ER
);
1445 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("DISC"))
1447 printk(" - Already disconnected! ");
1448 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1450 switch (hostdata
->state
) {
1451 case S_PRE_CMP_DISC
:
1452 hostdata
->connected
= NULL
;
1453 hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] &= ~(1 << cmd
->device
->lun
);
1454 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1455 DB(DB_INTR
, printk(":%d", cmd
->SCp
.Status
))
1456 if (cmd
->cmnd
[0] == REQUEST_SENSE
&& cmd
->SCp
.Status
!= GOOD
)
1457 cmd
->result
= (cmd
->result
& 0x00ffff) | (DID_ERROR
<< 16);
1459 cmd
->result
= cmd
->SCp
.Status
| (cmd
->SCp
.Message
<< 8);
1460 cmd
->scsi_done(cmd
);
1462 case S_PRE_TMP_DISC
:
1463 case S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
:
1464 cmd
->host_scribble
= (uchar
*) hostdata
->disconnected_Q
;
1465 hostdata
->disconnected_Q
= cmd
;
1466 hostdata
->connected
= NULL
;
1467 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1469 #ifdef PROC_STATISTICS
1470 hostdata
->disc_done_cnt
[cmd
->device
->id
]++;
1475 printk("*** Unexpected DISCONNECT interrupt! ***");
1476 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1479 /* We are no longer connected to a target - check to see if
1480 * there are commands waiting to be executed.
1483 in2000_execute(instance
);
1488 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("RESEL"))
1490 /* First we have to make sure this reselection didn't */
1491 /* happen during Arbitration/Selection of some other device. */
1492 /* If yes, put losing command back on top of input_Q. */
1493 if (hostdata
->level2
<= L2_NONE
) {
1495 if (hostdata
->selecting
) {
1496 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->selecting
;
1497 hostdata
->selecting
= NULL
;
1498 hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] &= ~(1 << cmd
->device
->lun
);
1499 cmd
->host_scribble
= (uchar
*) hostdata
->input_Q
;
1500 hostdata
->input_Q
= cmd
;
1508 hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] &= ~(1 << cmd
->device
->lun
);
1509 cmd
->host_scribble
= (uchar
*) hostdata
->input_Q
;
1510 hostdata
->input_Q
= cmd
;
1512 printk("---%02x:%02x:%02x-TROUBLE: Intrusive ReSelect!---", asr
, sr
, phs
);
1520 /* OK - find out which device reselected us. */
1522 id
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_SOURCE_ID
);
1525 /* and extract the lun from the ID message. (Note that we don't
1526 * bother to check for a valid message here - I guess this is
1527 * not the right way to go, but....)
1530 lun
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_DATA
);
1531 if (hostdata
->level2
< L2_RESELECT
)
1532 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_NEGATE_ACK
);
1535 /* Now we look for the command that's reconnecting. */
1537 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->disconnected_Q
;
1540 if (id
== cmd
->device
->id
&& lun
== cmd
->device
->lun
)
1543 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) cmd
->host_scribble
;
1546 /* Hmm. Couldn't find a valid command.... What to do? */
1549 printk("---TROUBLE: target %d.%d not in disconnect queue---", id
, lun
);
1553 /* Ok, found the command - now start it up again. */
1556 patch
->host_scribble
= cmd
->host_scribble
;
1558 hostdata
->disconnected_Q
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) cmd
->host_scribble
;
1559 hostdata
->connected
= cmd
;
1561 /* We don't need to worry about 'initialize_SCp()' or 'hostdata->busy[]'
1562 * because these things are preserved over a disconnect.
1563 * But we DO need to fix the DPD bit so it's correct for this command.
1566 if (is_dir_out(cmd
))
1567 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_DESTINATION_ID
, cmd
->device
->id
);
1569 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_DESTINATION_ID
, cmd
->device
->id
| DSTID_DPD
);
1570 if (hostdata
->level2
>= L2_RESELECT
) {
1571 write_3393_count(hostdata
, 0); /* we want a DATA_PHASE interrupt */
1572 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND_PHASE
, 0x45);
1573 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_SEL_ATN_XFER
);
1574 hostdata
->state
= S_RUNNING_LEVEL2
;
1576 hostdata
->state
= S_CONNECTED
;
1581 printk("--UNKNOWN INTERRUPT:%02x:%02x:%02x--", asr
, sr
, phs
);
1584 write1_io(0, IO_LED_OFF
);
1586 DB(DB_INTR
, printk("} "))
1588 /* release the SMP spin_lock and restore irq state */
1589 spin_unlock_irqrestore(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
1595 #define RESET_CARD 0
1596 #define RESET_CARD_AND_BUS 1
1600 * Caller must hold instance lock!
1603 static int reset_hardware(struct Scsi_Host
*instance
, int type
)
1605 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
;
1608 hostdata
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) instance
->hostdata
;
1610 write1_io(0, IO_LED_ON
);
1611 if (type
== RESET_CARD_AND_BUS
) {
1612 write1_io(0, IO_CARD_RESET
);
1613 x
= read1_io(IO_HARDWARE
);
1615 x
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_SCSI_STATUS
); /* clear any WD intrpt */
1616 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_OWN_ID
, instance
->this_id
| OWNID_EAF
| OWNID_RAF
| OWNID_FS_8
);
1617 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_CONTROL
, CTRL_IDI
| CTRL_EDI
| CTRL_POLLED
);
1618 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_SYNCHRONOUS_TRANSFER
, calc_sync_xfer(hostdata
->default_sx_per
/ 4, DEFAULT_SX_OFF
));
1620 write1_io(0, IO_FIFO_WRITE
); /* clear fifo counter */
1621 write1_io(0, IO_FIFO_READ
); /* start fifo out in read mode */
1622 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_COMMAND
, WD_CMD_RESET
);
1623 /* FIXME: timeout ?? */
1624 while (!(READ_AUX_STAT() & ASR_INT
))
1625 cpu_relax(); /* wait for RESET to complete */
1627 x
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_SCSI_STATUS
); /* clear interrupt */
1629 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_QUEUE_TAG
, 0xa5); /* any random number */
1630 qt
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_QUEUE_TAG
);
1633 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_QUEUE_TAG
, 0);
1635 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_TIMEOUT_PERIOD
, TIMEOUT_PERIOD_VALUE
);
1636 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_CONTROL
, CTRL_IDI
| CTRL_EDI
| CTRL_POLLED
);
1637 write1_io(0, IO_LED_OFF
);
1643 static int in2000_bus_reset(Scsi_Cmnd
* cmd
)
1645 struct Scsi_Host
*instance
;
1646 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
;
1648 unsigned long flags
;
1650 instance
= cmd
->device
->host
;
1651 hostdata
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) instance
->hostdata
;
1653 printk(KERN_WARNING
"scsi%d: Reset. ", instance
->host_no
);
1655 spin_lock_irqsave(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
1657 /* do scsi-reset here */
1658 reset_hardware(instance
, RESET_CARD_AND_BUS
);
1659 for (x
= 0; x
< 8; x
++) {
1660 hostdata
->busy
[x
] = 0;
1661 hostdata
->sync_xfer
[x
] = calc_sync_xfer(DEFAULT_SX_PER
/ 4, DEFAULT_SX_OFF
);
1662 hostdata
->sync_stat
[x
] = SS_UNSET
; /* using default sync values */
1664 hostdata
->input_Q
= NULL
;
1665 hostdata
->selecting
= NULL
;
1666 hostdata
->connected
= NULL
;
1667 hostdata
->disconnected_Q
= NULL
;
1668 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1669 hostdata
->fifo
= FI_FIFO_UNUSED
;
1670 hostdata
->incoming_ptr
= 0;
1671 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 0;
1673 cmd
->result
= DID_RESET
<< 16;
1675 spin_unlock_irqrestore(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
1679 static int __in2000_abort(Scsi_Cmnd
* cmd
)
1681 struct Scsi_Host
*instance
;
1682 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
;
1683 Scsi_Cmnd
*tmp
, *prev
;
1685 unsigned long timeout
;
1687 instance
= cmd
->device
->host
;
1688 hostdata
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) instance
->hostdata
;
1690 printk(KERN_DEBUG
"scsi%d: Abort-", instance
->host_no
);
1691 printk("(asr=%02x,count=%ld,resid=%d,buf_resid=%d,have_data=%d,FC=%02x)- ", READ_AUX_STAT(), read_3393_count(hostdata
), cmd
->SCp
.this_residual
, cmd
->SCp
.buffers_residual
, cmd
->SCp
.have_data_in
, read1_io(IO_FIFO_COUNT
));
1694 * Case 1 : If the command hasn't been issued yet, we simply remove it
1698 tmp
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->input_Q
;
1703 prev
->host_scribble
= cmd
->host_scribble
;
1704 cmd
->host_scribble
= NULL
;
1705 cmd
->result
= DID_ABORT
<< 16;
1706 printk(KERN_WARNING
"scsi%d: Abort - removing command from input_Q. ", instance
->host_no
);
1707 cmd
->scsi_done(cmd
);
1711 tmp
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) tmp
->host_scribble
;
1715 * Case 2 : If the command is connected, we're going to fail the abort
1716 * and let the high level SCSI driver retry at a later time or
1719 * Timeouts, and therefore aborted commands, will be highly unlikely
1720 * and handling them cleanly in this situation would make the common
1721 * case of noresets less efficient, and would pollute our code. So,
1725 if (hostdata
->connected
== cmd
) {
1727 printk(KERN_WARNING
"scsi%d: Aborting connected command - ", instance
->host_no
);
1729 printk("sending wd33c93 ABORT command - ");
1730 write_3393(hostdata
, WD_CONTROL
, CTRL_IDI
| CTRL_EDI
| CTRL_POLLED
);
1731 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_ABORT
);
1733 /* Now we have to attempt to flush out the FIFO... */
1735 printk("flushing fifo - ");
1738 asr
= READ_AUX_STAT();
1740 read_3393(hostdata
, WD_DATA
);
1741 } while (!(asr
& ASR_INT
) && timeout
-- > 0);
1742 sr
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_SCSI_STATUS
);
1743 printk("asr=%02x, sr=%02x, %ld bytes un-transferred (timeout=%ld) - ", asr
, sr
, read_3393_count(hostdata
), timeout
);
1746 * Abort command processed.
1748 * We must disconnect.
1751 printk("sending wd33c93 DISCONNECT command - ");
1752 write_3393_cmd(hostdata
, WD_CMD_DISCONNECT
);
1755 asr
= READ_AUX_STAT();
1756 while ((asr
& ASR_CIP
) && timeout
-- > 0)
1757 asr
= READ_AUX_STAT();
1758 sr
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_SCSI_STATUS
);
1759 printk("asr=%02x, sr=%02x.", asr
, sr
);
1761 hostdata
->busy
[cmd
->device
->id
] &= ~(1 << cmd
->device
->lun
);
1762 hostdata
->connected
= NULL
;
1763 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
1764 cmd
->result
= DID_ABORT
<< 16;
1765 cmd
->scsi_done(cmd
);
1767 in2000_execute(instance
);
1773 * Case 3: If the command is currently disconnected from the bus,
1774 * we're not going to expend much effort here: Let's just return
1775 * an ABORT_SNOOZE and hope for the best...
1778 for (tmp
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hostdata
->disconnected_Q
; tmp
; tmp
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) tmp
->host_scribble
)
1780 printk(KERN_DEBUG
"scsi%d: unable to abort disconnected command.\n", instance
->host_no
);
1785 * Case 4 : If we reached this point, the command was not found in any of
1788 * We probably reached this point because of an unlikely race condition
1789 * between the command completing successfully and the abortion code,
1790 * so we won't panic, but we will notify the user in case something really
1794 in2000_execute(instance
);
1796 printk("scsi%d: warning : SCSI command probably completed successfully" " before abortion. ", instance
->host_no
);
1800 static int in2000_abort(Scsi_Cmnd
* cmd
)
1804 spin_lock_irq(cmd
->device
->host
->host_lock
);
1805 rc
= __in2000_abort(cmd
);
1806 spin_unlock_irq(cmd
->device
->host
->host_lock
);
1812 #define MAX_IN2000_HOSTS 3
1813 #define MAX_SETUP_ARGS ARRAY_SIZE(setup_args)
1814 #define SETUP_BUFFER_SIZE 200
1815 static char setup_buffer
[SETUP_BUFFER_SIZE
];
1816 static char setup_used
[MAX_SETUP_ARGS
];
1817 static int done_setup
= 0;
1819 static void __init
in2000_setup(char *str
, int *ints
)
1824 strlcpy(setup_buffer
, str
, SETUP_BUFFER_SIZE
);
1827 while (*p1
&& (i
< MAX_SETUP_ARGS
)) {
1828 p2
= strchr(p1
, ',');
1840 for (i
= 0; i
< MAX_SETUP_ARGS
; i
++)
1846 /* check_setup_args() returns index if key found, 0 if not
1849 static int __init
check_setup_args(char *key
, int *val
, char *buf
)
1854 for (x
= 0; x
< MAX_SETUP_ARGS
; x
++) {
1857 if (!strncmp(setup_args
[x
], key
, strlen(key
)))
1860 if (x
== MAX_SETUP_ARGS
)
1863 cp
= setup_args
[x
] + strlen(key
);
1868 if ((*cp
>= '0') && (*cp
<= '9')) {
1869 *val
= simple_strtoul(cp
, NULL
, 0);
1876 /* The "correct" (ie portable) way to access memory-mapped hardware
1877 * such as the IN2000 EPROM and dip switch is through the use of
1878 * special macros declared in 'asm/io.h'. We use readb() and readl()
1879 * when reading from the card's BIOS area in in2000_detect().
1881 static u32 bios_tab
[] in2000__INITDATA
= {
1888 static unsigned short base_tab
[] in2000__INITDATA
= {
1895 static int int_tab
[] in2000__INITDATA
= {
1902 static int probe_bios(u32 addr
, u32
*s1
, uchar
*switches
)
1904 void __iomem
*p
= ioremap(addr
, 0x34);
1907 *s1
= readl(p
+ 0x10);
1908 if (*s1
== 0x41564f4e || readl(p
+ 0x30) == 0x61776c41) {
1909 /* Read the switch image that's mapped into EPROM space */
1910 *switches
= ~readb(p
+ 0x20);
1918 static int __init
in2000_detect(struct scsi_host_template
* tpnt
)
1920 struct Scsi_Host
*instance
;
1921 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hostdata
;
1925 unsigned short base
;
1928 unsigned long flags
;
1932 /* Thanks to help from Bill Earnest, probing for IN2000 cards is a
1933 * pretty straightforward and fool-proof operation. There are 3
1934 * possible locations for the IN2000 EPROM in memory space - if we
1935 * find a BIOS signature, we can read the dip switch settings from
1936 * the byte at BIOS+32 (shadowed in by logic on the card). From 2
1937 * of the switch bits we get the card's address in IO space. There's
1938 * an image of the dip switch there, also, so we have a way to back-
1939 * check that this really is an IN2000 card. Very nifty. Use the
1940 * 'ioport:xx' command-line parameter if your BIOS EPROM is absent
1944 if (!done_setup
&& setup_strings
)
1945 in2000_setup(setup_strings
, NULL
);
1948 for (bios
= 0; bios_tab
[bios
]; bios
++) {
1950 if (check_setup_args("ioport", &val
, buf
)) {
1952 switches
= ~inb(base
+ IO_SWITCHES
) & 0xff;
1953 printk("Forcing IN2000 detection at IOport 0x%x ", base
);
1957 * There have been a couple of BIOS versions with different layouts
1958 * for the obvious ID strings. We look for the 2 most common ones and
1959 * hope that they cover all the cases...
1961 else if (probe_bios(bios_tab
[bios
], &s1
, &switches
)) {
1962 printk("Found IN2000 BIOS at 0x%x ", (unsigned int) bios_tab
[bios
]);
1964 /* Find out where the IO space is */
1966 x
= switches
& (SW_ADDR0
| SW_ADDR1
);
1969 /* Check for the IN2000 signature in IO space. */
1971 x
= ~inb(base
+ IO_SWITCHES
) & 0xff;
1972 if (x
!= switches
) {
1973 printk("Bad IO signature: %02x vs %02x.\n", x
, switches
);
1979 /* OK. We have a base address for the IO ports - run a few safety checks */
1981 if (!(switches
& SW_BIT7
)) { /* I _think_ all cards do this */
1982 printk("There is no IN-2000 SCSI card at IOport 0x%03x!\n", base
);
1986 /* Let's assume any hardware version will work, although the driver
1987 * has only been tested on 0x21, 0x22, 0x25, 0x26, and 0x27. We'll
1988 * print out the rev number for reference later, but accept them all.
1991 hrev
= inb(base
+ IO_HARDWARE
);
1993 /* Bit 2 tells us if interrupts are disabled */
1994 if (switches
& SW_DISINT
) {
1995 printk("The IN-2000 SCSI card at IOport 0x%03x ", base
);
1996 printk("is not configured for interrupt operation!\n");
1997 printk("This driver requires an interrupt: cancelling detection.\n");
2001 /* Ok. We accept that there's an IN2000 at ioaddr 'base'. Now
2005 tpnt
->proc_name
= "in2000";
2006 instance
= scsi_register(tpnt
, sizeof(struct IN2000_hostdata
));
2007 if (instance
== NULL
)
2010 hostdata
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) instance
->hostdata
;
2011 instance
->io_port
= hostdata
->io_base
= base
;
2012 hostdata
->dip_switch
= switches
;
2013 hostdata
->hrev
= hrev
;
2015 write1_io(0, IO_FIFO_WRITE
); /* clear fifo counter */
2016 write1_io(0, IO_FIFO_READ
); /* start fifo out in read mode */
2017 write1_io(0, IO_INTR_MASK
); /* allow all ints */
2018 x
= int_tab
[(switches
& (SW_INT0
| SW_INT1
)) >> SW_INT_SHIFT
];
2019 if (request_irq(x
, in2000_intr
, IRQF_DISABLED
, "in2000", instance
)) {
2020 printk("in2000_detect: Unable to allocate IRQ.\n");
2025 instance
->n_io_port
= 13;
2026 request_region(base
, 13, "in2000"); /* lock in this IO space for our use */
2028 for (x
= 0; x
< 8; x
++) {
2029 hostdata
->busy
[x
] = 0;
2030 hostdata
->sync_xfer
[x
] = calc_sync_xfer(DEFAULT_SX_PER
/ 4, DEFAULT_SX_OFF
);
2031 hostdata
->sync_stat
[x
] = SS_UNSET
; /* using default sync values */
2032 #ifdef PROC_STATISTICS
2033 hostdata
->cmd_cnt
[x
] = 0;
2034 hostdata
->disc_allowed_cnt
[x
] = 0;
2035 hostdata
->disc_done_cnt
[x
] = 0;
2038 hostdata
->input_Q
= NULL
;
2039 hostdata
->selecting
= NULL
;
2040 hostdata
->connected
= NULL
;
2041 hostdata
->disconnected_Q
= NULL
;
2042 hostdata
->state
= S_UNCONNECTED
;
2043 hostdata
->fifo
= FI_FIFO_UNUSED
;
2044 hostdata
->level2
= L2_BASIC
;
2045 hostdata
->disconnect
= DIS_ADAPTIVE
;
2046 hostdata
->args
= DEBUG_DEFAULTS
;
2047 hostdata
->incoming_ptr
= 0;
2048 hostdata
->outgoing_len
= 0;
2049 hostdata
->default_sx_per
= DEFAULT_SX_PER
;
2051 /* Older BIOS's had a 'sync on/off' switch - use its setting */
2053 if (s1
== 0x41564f4e && (switches
& SW_SYNC_DOS5
))
2054 hostdata
->sync_off
= 0x00; /* sync defaults to on */
2056 hostdata
->sync_off
= 0xff; /* sync defaults to off */
2058 #ifdef PROC_INTERFACE
2059 hostdata
->proc
= PR_VERSION
| PR_INFO
| PR_STATISTICS
| PR_CONNECTED
| PR_INPUTQ
| PR_DISCQ
| PR_STOP
;
2060 #ifdef PROC_STATISTICS
2061 hostdata
->int_cnt
= 0;
2065 if (check_setup_args("nosync", &val
, buf
))
2066 hostdata
->sync_off
= val
;
2068 if (check_setup_args("period", &val
, buf
))
2069 hostdata
->default_sx_per
= sx_table
[round_period((unsigned int) val
)].period_ns
;
2071 if (check_setup_args("disconnect", &val
, buf
)) {
2072 if ((val
>= DIS_NEVER
) && (val
<= DIS_ALWAYS
))
2073 hostdata
->disconnect
= val
;
2075 hostdata
->disconnect
= DIS_ADAPTIVE
;
2078 if (check_setup_args("noreset", &val
, buf
))
2079 hostdata
->args
^= A_NO_SCSI_RESET
;
2081 if (check_setup_args("level2", &val
, buf
))
2082 hostdata
->level2
= val
;
2084 if (check_setup_args("debug", &val
, buf
))
2085 hostdata
->args
= (val
& DB_MASK
);
2087 #ifdef PROC_INTERFACE
2088 if (check_setup_args("proc", &val
, buf
))
2089 hostdata
->proc
= val
;
2093 /* FIXME: not strictly needed I think but the called code expects
2095 spin_lock_irqsave(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
2096 x
= reset_hardware(instance
, (hostdata
->args
& A_NO_SCSI_RESET
) ? RESET_CARD
: RESET_CARD_AND_BUS
);
2097 spin_unlock_irqrestore(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
2099 hostdata
->microcode
= read_3393(hostdata
, WD_CDB_1
);
2102 hostdata
->chip
= C_WD33C93B
;
2104 hostdata
->chip
= C_WD33C93A
;
2106 hostdata
->chip
= C_WD33C93
;
2108 printk("dip_switch=%02x irq=%d ioport=%02x floppy=%s sync/DOS5=%s ", (switches
& 0x7f), instance
->irq
, hostdata
->io_base
, (switches
& SW_FLOPPY
) ? "Yes" : "No", (switches
& SW_SYNC_DOS5
) ? "Yes" : "No");
2109 printk("hardware_ver=%02x chip=%s microcode=%02x\n", hrev
, (hostdata
->chip
== C_WD33C93
) ? "WD33c93" : (hostdata
->chip
== C_WD33C93A
) ? "WD33c93A" : (hostdata
->chip
== C_WD33C93B
) ? "WD33c93B" : "unknown", hostdata
->microcode
);
2111 printk("setup_args = ");
2112 for (x
= 0; x
< MAX_SETUP_ARGS
; x
++)
2113 printk("%s,", setup_args
[x
]);
2116 if (hostdata
->sync_off
== 0xff)
2117 printk("Sync-transfer DISABLED on all devices: ENABLE from command-line\n");
2118 printk("IN2000 driver version %s - %s\n", IN2000_VERSION
, IN2000_DATE
);
2121 return detect_count
;
2124 static int in2000_release(struct Scsi_Host
*shost
)
2127 free_irq(shost
->irq
, shost
);
2128 if (shost
->io_port
&& shost
->n_io_port
)
2129 release_region(shost
->io_port
, shost
->n_io_port
);
2133 /* NOTE: I lifted this function straight out of the old driver,
2134 * and have not tested it. Presumably it does what it's
2138 static int in2000_biosparam(struct scsi_device
*sdev
, struct block_device
*bdev
, sector_t capacity
, int *iinfo
)
2145 iinfo
[2] = size
>> 11;
2147 /* This should approximate the large drive handling that the DOS ASPI manager
2148 uses. Drives very near the boundaries may not be handled correctly (i.e.
2149 near 2.0 Gb and 4.0 Gb) */
2151 if (iinfo
[2] > 1024) {
2154 iinfo
[2] = (unsigned long) capacity
/ (iinfo
[0] * iinfo
[1]);
2156 if (iinfo
[2] > 1024) {
2159 iinfo
[2] = (unsigned long) capacity
/ (iinfo
[0] * iinfo
[1]);
2161 if (iinfo
[2] > 1024) {
2164 iinfo
[2] = (unsigned long) capacity
/ (iinfo
[0] * iinfo
[1]);
2170 static int in2000_proc_info(struct Scsi_Host
*instance
, char *buf
, char **start
, off_t off
, int len
, int in
)
2173 #ifdef PROC_INTERFACE
2177 unsigned long flags
;
2178 struct IN2000_hostdata
*hd
;
2181 static int stop
= 0;
2183 hd
= (struct IN2000_hostdata
*) instance
->hostdata
;
2185 /* If 'in' is TRUE we need to _read_ the proc file. We accept the following
2186 * keywords (same format as command-line, but only ONE per read):
2197 if (!strncmp(bp
, "debug:", 6)) {
2199 hd
->args
= simple_strtoul(bp
, NULL
, 0) & DB_MASK
;
2200 } else if (!strncmp(bp
, "disconnect:", 11)) {
2202 x
= simple_strtoul(bp
, NULL
, 0);
2203 if (x
< DIS_NEVER
|| x
> DIS_ALWAYS
)
2206 } else if (!strncmp(bp
, "period:", 7)) {
2208 x
= simple_strtoul(bp
, NULL
, 0);
2209 hd
->default_sx_per
= sx_table
[round_period((unsigned int) x
)].period_ns
;
2210 } else if (!strncmp(bp
, "resync:", 7)) {
2212 x
= simple_strtoul(bp
, NULL
, 0);
2213 for (i
= 0; i
< 7; i
++)
2215 hd
->sync_stat
[i
] = SS_UNSET
;
2216 } else if (!strncmp(bp
, "proc:", 5)) {
2218 hd
->proc
= simple_strtoul(bp
, NULL
, 0);
2219 } else if (!strncmp(bp
, "level2:", 7)) {
2221 hd
->level2
= simple_strtoul(bp
, NULL
, 0);
2226 spin_lock_irqsave(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
2229 if (hd
->proc
& PR_VERSION
) {
2230 sprintf(tbuf
, "\nVersion %s - %s. Compiled %s %s", IN2000_VERSION
, IN2000_DATE
, __DATE__
, __TIME__
);
2233 if (hd
->proc
& PR_INFO
) {
2234 sprintf(tbuf
, "\ndip_switch=%02x: irq=%d io=%02x floppy=%s sync/DOS5=%s", (hd
->dip_switch
& 0x7f), instance
->irq
, hd
->io_base
, (hd
->dip_switch
& 0x40) ? "Yes" : "No", (hd
->dip_switch
& 0x20) ? "Yes" : "No");
2236 strcat(bp
, "\nsync_xfer[] = ");
2237 for (x
= 0; x
< 7; x
++) {
2238 sprintf(tbuf
, "\t%02x", hd
->sync_xfer
[x
]);
2241 strcat(bp
, "\nsync_stat[] = ");
2242 for (x
= 0; x
< 7; x
++) {
2243 sprintf(tbuf
, "\t%02x", hd
->sync_stat
[x
]);
2247 #ifdef PROC_STATISTICS
2248 if (hd
->proc
& PR_STATISTICS
) {
2249 strcat(bp
, "\ncommands issued: ");
2250 for (x
= 0; x
< 7; x
++) {
2251 sprintf(tbuf
, "\t%ld", hd
->cmd_cnt
[x
]);
2254 strcat(bp
, "\ndisconnects allowed:");
2255 for (x
= 0; x
< 7; x
++) {
2256 sprintf(tbuf
, "\t%ld", hd
->disc_allowed_cnt
[x
]);
2259 strcat(bp
, "\ndisconnects done: ");
2260 for (x
= 0; x
< 7; x
++) {
2261 sprintf(tbuf
, "\t%ld", hd
->disc_done_cnt
[x
]);
2264 sprintf(tbuf
, "\ninterrupts: \t%ld", hd
->int_cnt
);
2268 if (hd
->proc
& PR_CONNECTED
) {
2269 strcat(bp
, "\nconnected: ");
2270 if (hd
->connected
) {
2271 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hd
->connected
;
2272 sprintf(tbuf
, " %d:%d(%02x)", cmd
->device
->id
, cmd
->device
->lun
, cmd
->cmnd
[0]);
2276 if (hd
->proc
& PR_INPUTQ
) {
2277 strcat(bp
, "\ninput_Q: ");
2278 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hd
->input_Q
;
2280 sprintf(tbuf
, " %d:%d(%02x)", cmd
->device
->id
, cmd
->device
->lun
, cmd
->cmnd
[0]);
2282 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) cmd
->host_scribble
;
2285 if (hd
->proc
& PR_DISCQ
) {
2286 strcat(bp
, "\ndisconnected_Q:");
2287 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) hd
->disconnected_Q
;
2289 sprintf(tbuf
, " %d:%d(%02x)", cmd
->device
->id
, cmd
->device
->lun
, cmd
->cmnd
[0]);
2291 cmd
= (Scsi_Cmnd
*) cmd
->host_scribble
;
2294 if (hd
->proc
& PR_TEST
) {
2295 ; /* insert your own custom function here */
2298 spin_unlock_irqrestore(instance
->host_lock
, flags
);
2302 return 0; /* return 0 to signal end-of-file */
2304 if (off
> 0x40000) /* ALWAYS stop after 256k bytes have been read */
2306 if (hd
->proc
& PR_STOP
) /* stop every other time */
2310 #else /* PROC_INTERFACE */
2314 #endif /* PROC_INTERFACE */
2318 MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
2321 static struct scsi_host_template driver_template
= {
2322 .proc_name
= "in2000",
2323 .proc_info
= in2000_proc_info
,
2324 .name
= "Always IN2000",
2325 .detect
= in2000_detect
,
2326 .release
= in2000_release
,
2327 .queuecommand
= in2000_queuecommand
,
2328 .eh_abort_handler
= in2000_abort
,
2329 .eh_bus_reset_handler
= in2000_bus_reset
,
2330 .bios_param
= in2000_biosparam
,
2331 .can_queue
= IN2000_CAN_Q
,
2332 .this_id
= IN2000_HOST_ID
,
2333 .sg_tablesize
= IN2000_SG
,
2334 .cmd_per_lun
= IN2000_CPL
,
2335 .use_clustering
= DISABLE_CLUSTERING
,
2337 #include "scsi_module.c"