linux_dsm_epyc7002/drivers/scsi/mpt2sas/mpt2sas_base.c

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/*
* This is the Fusion MPT base driver providing common API layer interface
* for access to MPT (Message Passing Technology) firmware.
*
* This code is based on drivers/scsi/mpt2sas/mpt2_base.c
* Copyright (C) 2007-2012 LSI Corporation
* (mailto:DL-MPTFusionLinux@lsi.com)
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
* of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* NO WARRANTY
* THE PROGRAM IS PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR
* CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED INCLUDING, WITHOUT
* LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF TITLE, NON-INFRINGEMENT,
* MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Each Recipient is
* solely responsible for determining the appropriateness of using and
* distributing the Program and assumes all risks associated with its
* exercise of rights under this Agreement, including but not limited to
* the risks and costs of program errors, damage to or loss of data,
* programs or equipment, and unavailability or interruption of operations.
* DISCLAIMER OF LIABILITY
* NEITHER RECIPIENT NOR ANY CONTRIBUTORS SHALL HAVE ANY LIABILITY FOR ANY
* DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION LOST PROFITS), HOWEVER CAUSED AND
* ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR
* TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE
* USE OR DISTRIBUTION OF THE PROGRAM OR THE EXERCISE OF ANY RIGHTS GRANTED
* HEREUNDER, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301,
* USA.
*/
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/errno.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/pci.h>
#include <linux/kdev_t.h>
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
#include <linux/delay.h>
#include <linux/interrupt.h>
#include <linux/dma-mapping.h>
#include <linux/sort.h>
#include <linux/io.h>
#include <linux/time.h>
#include <linux/kthread.h>
#include <linux/aer.h>
#include "mpt2sas_base.h"
static MPT_CALLBACK mpt_callbacks[MPT_MAX_CALLBACKS];
#define FAULT_POLLING_INTERVAL 1000 /* in milliseconds */
#define MAX_HBA_QUEUE_DEPTH 30000
#define MAX_CHAIN_DEPTH 100000
static int max_queue_depth = -1;
module_param(max_queue_depth, int, 0);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(max_queue_depth, " max controller queue depth ");
static int max_sgl_entries = -1;
module_param(max_sgl_entries, int, 0);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(max_sgl_entries, " max sg entries ");
static int msix_disable = -1;
module_param(msix_disable, int, 0);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(msix_disable, " disable msix routed interrupts (default=0)");
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
static int mpt2sas_fwfault_debug;
MODULE_PARM_DESC(mpt2sas_fwfault_debug, " enable detection of firmware fault "
"and halt firmware - (default=0)");
static int disable_discovery = -1;
module_param(disable_discovery, int, 0);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(disable_discovery, " disable discovery ");
/**
* _scsih_set_fwfault_debug - global setting of ioc->fwfault_debug.
*
*/
static int
_scsih_set_fwfault_debug(const char *val, struct kernel_param *kp)
{
int ret = param_set_int(val, kp);
struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc;
if (ret)
return ret;
printk(KERN_INFO "setting fwfault_debug(%d)\n", mpt2sas_fwfault_debug);
list_for_each_entry(ioc, &mpt2sas_ioc_list, list)
ioc->fwfault_debug = mpt2sas_fwfault_debug;
return 0;
}
module_param_call(mpt2sas_fwfault_debug, _scsih_set_fwfault_debug,
param_get_int, &mpt2sas_fwfault_debug, 0644);
/**
* mpt2sas_remove_dead_ioc_func - kthread context to remove dead ioc
* @arg: input argument, used to derive ioc
*
* Return 0 if controller is removed from pci subsystem.
* Return -1 for other case.
*/
static int mpt2sas_remove_dead_ioc_func(void *arg)
{
struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc = (struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *)arg;
struct pci_dev *pdev;
if ((ioc == NULL))
return -1;
pdev = ioc->pdev;
if ((pdev == NULL))
return -1;
pci_stop_and_remove_bus_device(pdev);
return 0;
}
/**
* _base_fault_reset_work - workq handling ioc fault conditions
* @work: input argument, used to derive ioc
* Context: sleep.
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_fault_reset_work(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc =
container_of(work, struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER, fault_reset_work.work);
unsigned long flags;
u32 doorbell;
int rc;
struct task_struct *p;
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
if (ioc->shost_recovery || ioc->pci_error_recovery)
goto rearm_timer;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
doorbell = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 0);
if ((doorbell & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) == MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) {
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s : SAS host is non-operational !!!!\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
/* It may be possible that EEH recovery can resolve some of
* pci bus failure issues rather removing the dead ioc function
* by considering controller is in a non-operational state. So
* here priority is given to the EEH recovery. If it doesn't
* not resolve this issue, mpt2sas driver will consider this
* controller to non-operational state and remove the dead ioc
* function.
*/
if (ioc->non_operational_loop++ < 5) {
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock,
flags);
goto rearm_timer;
}
/*
* Call _scsih_flush_pending_cmds callback so that we flush all
* pending commands back to OS. This call is required to aovid
* deadlock at block layer. Dead IOC will fail to do diag reset,
* and this call is safe since dead ioc will never return any
* command back from HW.
*/
ioc->schedule_dead_ioc_flush_running_cmds(ioc);
/*
* Set remove_host flag early since kernel thread will
* take some time to execute.
*/
ioc->remove_host = 1;
/*Remove the Dead Host */
p = kthread_run(mpt2sas_remove_dead_ioc_func, ioc,
"mpt2sas_dead_ioc_%d", ioc->id);
if (IS_ERR(p)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT
"%s: Running mpt2sas_dead_ioc thread failed !!!!\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
} else {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT
"%s: Running mpt2sas_dead_ioc thread success !!!!\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
}
return; /* don't rearm timer */
}
ioc->non_operational_loop = 0;
if ((doorbell & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) == MPI2_IOC_STATE_FAULT) {
rc = mpt2sas_base_hard_reset_handler(ioc, CAN_SLEEP,
FORCE_BIG_HAMMER);
printk(MPT2SAS_WARN_FMT "%s: hard reset: %s\n", ioc->name,
__func__, (rc == 0) ? "success" : "failed");
doorbell = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 0);
if ((doorbell & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) == MPI2_IOC_STATE_FAULT)
mpt2sas_base_fault_info(ioc, doorbell &
MPI2_DOORBELL_DATA_MASK);
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
rearm_timer:
if (ioc->fault_reset_work_q)
queue_delayed_work(ioc->fault_reset_work_q,
&ioc->fault_reset_work,
msecs_to_jiffies(FAULT_POLLING_INTERVAL));
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_start_watchdog - start the fault_reset_work_q
* @ioc: per adapter object
* Context: sleep.
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_start_watchdog(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
unsigned long flags;
if (ioc->fault_reset_work_q)
return;
/* initialize fault polling */
INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&ioc->fault_reset_work, _base_fault_reset_work);
snprintf(ioc->fault_reset_work_q_name,
sizeof(ioc->fault_reset_work_q_name), "poll_%d_status", ioc->id);
ioc->fault_reset_work_q =
create_singlethread_workqueue(ioc->fault_reset_work_q_name);
if (!ioc->fault_reset_work_q) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed (line=%d)\n",
ioc->name, __func__, __LINE__);
return;
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
if (ioc->fault_reset_work_q)
queue_delayed_work(ioc->fault_reset_work_q,
&ioc->fault_reset_work,
msecs_to_jiffies(FAULT_POLLING_INTERVAL));
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_stop_watchdog - stop the fault_reset_work_q
* @ioc: per adapter object
* Context: sleep.
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_stop_watchdog(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
unsigned long flags;
struct workqueue_struct *wq;
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
wq = ioc->fault_reset_work_q;
ioc->fault_reset_work_q = NULL;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
if (wq) {
if (!cancel_delayed_work(&ioc->fault_reset_work))
flush_workqueue(wq);
destroy_workqueue(wq);
}
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_fault_info - verbose translation of firmware FAULT code
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @fault_code: fault code
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_fault_info(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc , u16 fault_code)
{
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "fault_state(0x%04x)!\n",
ioc->name, fault_code);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_halt_firmware - halt's mpt controller firmware
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* For debugging timeout related issues. Writing 0xCOFFEE00
* to the doorbell register will halt controller firmware. With
* the purpose to stop both driver and firmware, the enduser can
* obtain a ring buffer from controller UART.
*/
void
mpt2sas_halt_firmware(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
u32 doorbell;
if (!ioc->fwfault_debug)
return;
dump_stack();
doorbell = readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell);
if ((doorbell & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) == MPI2_IOC_STATE_FAULT)
mpt2sas_base_fault_info(ioc , doorbell);
else {
writel(0xC0FFEE00, &ioc->chip->Doorbell);
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "Firmware is halted due to command "
"timeout\n", ioc->name);
}
panic("panic in %s\n", __func__);
}
#ifdef CONFIG_SCSI_MPT2SAS_LOGGING
/**
* _base_sas_ioc_info - verbose translation of the ioc status
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @mpi_reply: reply mf payload returned from firmware
* @request_hdr: request mf
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_sas_ioc_info(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, MPI2DefaultReply_t *mpi_reply,
MPI2RequestHeader_t *request_hdr)
{
u16 ioc_status = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply->IOCStatus) &
MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK;
char *desc = NULL;
u16 frame_sz;
char *func_str = NULL;
/* SCSI_IO, RAID_PASS are handled from _scsih_scsi_ioc_info */
if (request_hdr->Function == MPI2_FUNCTION_SCSI_IO_REQUEST ||
request_hdr->Function == MPI2_FUNCTION_RAID_SCSI_IO_PASSTHROUGH ||
request_hdr->Function == MPI2_FUNCTION_EVENT_NOTIFICATION)
return;
if (ioc_status == MPI2_IOCSTATUS_CONFIG_INVALID_PAGE)
return;
switch (ioc_status) {
/****************************************************************************
* Common IOCStatus values for all replies
****************************************************************************/
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_INVALID_FUNCTION:
desc = "invalid function";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_BUSY:
desc = "busy";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_INVALID_SGL:
desc = "invalid sgl";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_INTERNAL_ERROR:
desc = "internal error";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_INVALID_VPID:
desc = "invalid vpid";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_INSUFFICIENT_RESOURCES:
desc = "insufficient resources";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_INVALID_FIELD:
desc = "invalid field";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_INVALID_STATE:
desc = "invalid state";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_OP_STATE_NOT_SUPPORTED:
desc = "op state not supported";
break;
/****************************************************************************
* Config IOCStatus values
****************************************************************************/
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_CONFIG_INVALID_ACTION:
desc = "config invalid action";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_CONFIG_INVALID_TYPE:
desc = "config invalid type";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_CONFIG_INVALID_PAGE:
desc = "config invalid page";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_CONFIG_INVALID_DATA:
desc = "config invalid data";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_CONFIG_NO_DEFAULTS:
desc = "config no defaults";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_CONFIG_CANT_COMMIT:
desc = "config cant commit";
break;
/****************************************************************************
* SCSI IO Reply
****************************************************************************/
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_RECOVERED_ERROR:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_INVALID_DEVHANDLE:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_DEVICE_NOT_THERE:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_DATA_OVERRUN:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_DATA_UNDERRUN:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_IO_DATA_ERROR:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_PROTOCOL_ERROR:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_TASK_TERMINATED:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_RESIDUAL_MISMATCH:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_TASK_MGMT_FAILED:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_IOC_TERMINATED:
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SCSI_EXT_TERMINATED:
break;
/****************************************************************************
* For use by SCSI Initiator and SCSI Target end-to-end data protection
****************************************************************************/
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_EEDP_GUARD_ERROR:
desc = "eedp guard error";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_EEDP_REF_TAG_ERROR:
desc = "eedp ref tag error";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_EEDP_APP_TAG_ERROR:
desc = "eedp app tag error";
break;
/****************************************************************************
* SCSI Target values
****************************************************************************/
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_INVALID_IO_INDEX:
desc = "target invalid io index";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_ABORTED:
desc = "target aborted";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_NO_CONN_RETRYABLE:
desc = "target no conn retryable";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_NO_CONNECTION:
desc = "target no connection";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_XFER_COUNT_MISMATCH:
desc = "target xfer count mismatch";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_DATA_OFFSET_ERROR:
desc = "target data offset error";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_TOO_MUCH_WRITE_DATA:
desc = "target too much write data";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_IU_TOO_SHORT:
desc = "target iu too short";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_ACK_NAK_TIMEOUT:
desc = "target ack nak timeout";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_TARGET_NAK_RECEIVED:
desc = "target nak received";
break;
/****************************************************************************
* Serial Attached SCSI values
****************************************************************************/
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SAS_SMP_REQUEST_FAILED:
desc = "smp request failed";
break;
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SAS_SMP_DATA_OVERRUN:
desc = "smp data overrun";
break;
/****************************************************************************
* Diagnostic Buffer Post / Diagnostic Release values
****************************************************************************/
case MPI2_IOCSTATUS_DIAGNOSTIC_RELEASED:
desc = "diagnostic released";
break;
default:
break;
}
if (!desc)
return;
switch (request_hdr->Function) {
case MPI2_FUNCTION_CONFIG:
frame_sz = sizeof(Mpi2ConfigRequest_t) + ioc->sge_size;
func_str = "config_page";
break;
case MPI2_FUNCTION_SCSI_TASK_MGMT:
frame_sz = sizeof(Mpi2SCSITaskManagementRequest_t);
func_str = "task_mgmt";
break;
case MPI2_FUNCTION_SAS_IO_UNIT_CONTROL:
frame_sz = sizeof(Mpi2SasIoUnitControlRequest_t);
func_str = "sas_iounit_ctl";
break;
case MPI2_FUNCTION_SCSI_ENCLOSURE_PROCESSOR:
frame_sz = sizeof(Mpi2SepRequest_t);
func_str = "enclosure";
break;
case MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_INIT:
frame_sz = sizeof(Mpi2IOCInitRequest_t);
func_str = "ioc_init";
break;
case MPI2_FUNCTION_PORT_ENABLE:
frame_sz = sizeof(Mpi2PortEnableRequest_t);
func_str = "port_enable";
break;
case MPI2_FUNCTION_SMP_PASSTHROUGH:
frame_sz = sizeof(Mpi2SmpPassthroughRequest_t) + ioc->sge_size;
func_str = "smp_passthru";
break;
default:
frame_sz = 32;
func_str = "unknown";
break;
}
printk(MPT2SAS_WARN_FMT "ioc_status: %s(0x%04x), request(0x%p),"
" (%s)\n", ioc->name, desc, ioc_status, request_hdr, func_str);
_debug_dump_mf(request_hdr, frame_sz/4);
}
/**
* _base_display_event_data - verbose translation of firmware asyn events
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @mpi_reply: reply mf payload returned from firmware
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_display_event_data(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc,
Mpi2EventNotificationReply_t *mpi_reply)
{
char *desc = NULL;
u16 event;
if (!(ioc->logging_level & MPT_DEBUG_EVENTS))
return;
event = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply->Event);
switch (event) {
case MPI2_EVENT_LOG_DATA:
desc = "Log Data";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_STATE_CHANGE:
desc = "Status Change";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_HARD_RESET_RECEIVED:
desc = "Hard Reset Received";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_EVENT_CHANGE:
desc = "Event Change";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_SAS_DEVICE_STATUS_CHANGE:
desc = "Device Status Change";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_IR_OPERATION_STATUS:
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
if (!ioc->hide_ir_msg)
desc = "IR Operation Status";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_SAS_DISCOVERY:
{
Mpi2EventDataSasDiscovery_t *event_data =
(Mpi2EventDataSasDiscovery_t *)mpi_reply->EventData;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "Discovery: (%s)", ioc->name,
(event_data->ReasonCode == MPI2_EVENT_SAS_DISC_RC_STARTED) ?
"start" : "stop");
if (event_data->DiscoveryStatus)
printk("discovery_status(0x%08x)",
le32_to_cpu(event_data->DiscoveryStatus));
printk("\n");
return;
}
case MPI2_EVENT_SAS_BROADCAST_PRIMITIVE:
desc = "SAS Broadcast Primitive";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_SAS_INIT_DEVICE_STATUS_CHANGE:
desc = "SAS Init Device Status Change";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_SAS_INIT_TABLE_OVERFLOW:
desc = "SAS Init Table Overflow";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_SAS_TOPOLOGY_CHANGE_LIST:
desc = "SAS Topology Change List";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_SAS_ENCL_DEVICE_STATUS_CHANGE:
desc = "SAS Enclosure Device Status Change";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_IR_VOLUME:
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
if (!ioc->hide_ir_msg)
desc = "IR Volume";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_IR_PHYSICAL_DISK:
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
if (!ioc->hide_ir_msg)
desc = "IR Physical Disk";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_IR_CONFIGURATION_CHANGE_LIST:
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
if (!ioc->hide_ir_msg)
desc = "IR Configuration Change List";
break;
case MPI2_EVENT_LOG_ENTRY_ADDED:
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
if (!ioc->hide_ir_msg)
desc = "Log Entry Added";
break;
}
if (!desc)
return;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name, desc);
}
#endif
/**
* _base_sas_log_info - verbose translation of firmware log info
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @log_info: log info
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_sas_log_info(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc , u32 log_info)
{
union loginfo_type {
u32 loginfo;
struct {
u32 subcode:16;
u32 code:8;
u32 originator:4;
u32 bus_type:4;
} dw;
};
union loginfo_type sas_loginfo;
char *originator_str = NULL;
sas_loginfo.loginfo = log_info;
if (sas_loginfo.dw.bus_type != 3 /*SAS*/)
return;
/* each nexus loss loginfo */
if (log_info == 0x31170000)
return;
/* eat the loginfos associated with task aborts */
if (ioc->ignore_loginfos && (log_info == 0x30050000 || log_info ==
0x31140000 || log_info == 0x31130000))
return;
switch (sas_loginfo.dw.originator) {
case 0:
originator_str = "IOP";
break;
case 1:
originator_str = "PL";
break;
case 2:
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
if (!ioc->hide_ir_msg)
originator_str = "IR";
else
originator_str = "WarpDrive";
break;
}
printk(MPT2SAS_WARN_FMT "log_info(0x%08x): originator(%s), "
"code(0x%02x), sub_code(0x%04x)\n", ioc->name, log_info,
originator_str, sas_loginfo.dw.code,
sas_loginfo.dw.subcode);
}
/**
* _base_display_reply_info -
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
* @msix_index: MSIX table index supplied by the OS
* @reply: reply message frame(lower 32bit addr)
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_display_reply_info(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid, u8 msix_index,
u32 reply)
{
MPI2DefaultReply_t *mpi_reply;
u16 ioc_status;
mpi_reply = mpt2sas_base_get_reply_virt_addr(ioc, reply);
if (unlikely(!mpi_reply)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "mpi_reply not valid at %s:%d/%s()!\n",
ioc->name, __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__);
return;
}
ioc_status = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply->IOCStatus);
#ifdef CONFIG_SCSI_MPT2SAS_LOGGING
if ((ioc_status & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK) &&
(ioc->logging_level & MPT_DEBUG_REPLY)) {
_base_sas_ioc_info(ioc , mpi_reply,
mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame(ioc, smid));
}
#endif
if (ioc_status & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_FLAG_LOG_INFO_AVAILABLE)
_base_sas_log_info(ioc, le32_to_cpu(mpi_reply->IOCLogInfo));
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_done - base internal command completion routine
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
* @msix_index: MSIX table index supplied by the OS
* @reply: reply message frame(lower 32bit addr)
*
* Return 1 meaning mf should be freed from _base_interrupt
* 0 means the mf is freed from this function.
*/
u8
mpt2sas_base_done(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid, u8 msix_index,
u32 reply)
{
MPI2DefaultReply_t *mpi_reply;
mpi_reply = mpt2sas_base_get_reply_virt_addr(ioc, reply);
if (mpi_reply && mpi_reply->Function == MPI2_FUNCTION_EVENT_ACK)
return 1;
if (ioc->base_cmds.status == MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED)
return 1;
ioc->base_cmds.status |= MPT2_CMD_COMPLETE;
if (mpi_reply) {
ioc->base_cmds.status |= MPT2_CMD_REPLY_VALID;
memcpy(ioc->base_cmds.reply, mpi_reply, mpi_reply->MsgLength*4);
}
ioc->base_cmds.status &= ~MPT2_CMD_PENDING;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
complete(&ioc->base_cmds.done);
return 1;
}
/**
* _base_async_event - main callback handler for firmware asyn events
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @msix_index: MSIX table index supplied by the OS
* @reply: reply message frame(lower 32bit addr)
*
* Return 1 meaning mf should be freed from _base_interrupt
* 0 means the mf is freed from this function.
*/
static u8
_base_async_event(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u8 msix_index, u32 reply)
{
Mpi2EventNotificationReply_t *mpi_reply;
Mpi2EventAckRequest_t *ack_request;
u16 smid;
mpi_reply = mpt2sas_base_get_reply_virt_addr(ioc, reply);
if (!mpi_reply)
return 1;
if (mpi_reply->Function != MPI2_FUNCTION_EVENT_NOTIFICATION)
return 1;
#ifdef CONFIG_SCSI_MPT2SAS_LOGGING
_base_display_event_data(ioc, mpi_reply);
#endif
if (!(mpi_reply->AckRequired & MPI2_EVENT_NOTIFICATION_ACK_REQUIRED))
goto out;
smid = mpt2sas_base_get_smid(ioc, ioc->base_cb_idx);
if (!smid) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed obtaining a smid\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
goto out;
}
ack_request = mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame(ioc, smid);
memset(ack_request, 0, sizeof(Mpi2EventAckRequest_t));
ack_request->Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_EVENT_ACK;
ack_request->Event = mpi_reply->Event;
ack_request->EventContext = mpi_reply->EventContext;
ack_request->VF_ID = 0; /* TODO */
ack_request->VP_ID = 0;
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_default(ioc, smid);
out:
/* scsih callback handler */
mpt2sas_scsih_event_callback(ioc, msix_index, reply);
/* ctl callback handler */
mpt2sas_ctl_event_callback(ioc, msix_index, reply);
return 1;
}
/**
* _base_get_cb_idx - obtain the callback index
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
*
* Return callback index.
*/
static u8
_base_get_cb_idx(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid)
{
int i;
u8 cb_idx;
if (smid < ioc->hi_priority_smid) {
i = smid - 1;
cb_idx = ioc->scsi_lookup[i].cb_idx;
} else if (smid < ioc->internal_smid) {
i = smid - ioc->hi_priority_smid;
cb_idx = ioc->hpr_lookup[i].cb_idx;
} else if (smid <= ioc->hba_queue_depth) {
i = smid - ioc->internal_smid;
cb_idx = ioc->internal_lookup[i].cb_idx;
} else
cb_idx = 0xFF;
return cb_idx;
}
/**
* _base_mask_interrupts - disable interrupts
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Disabling ResetIRQ, Reply and Doorbell Interrupts
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_mask_interrupts(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
u32 him_register;
ioc->mask_interrupts = 1;
him_register = readl(&ioc->chip->HostInterruptMask);
him_register |= MPI2_HIM_DIM + MPI2_HIM_RIM + MPI2_HIM_RESET_IRQ_MASK;
writel(him_register, &ioc->chip->HostInterruptMask);
readl(&ioc->chip->HostInterruptMask);
}
/**
* _base_unmask_interrupts - enable interrupts
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Enabling only Reply Interrupts
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_unmask_interrupts(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
u32 him_register;
him_register = readl(&ioc->chip->HostInterruptMask);
him_register &= ~MPI2_HIM_RIM;
writel(him_register, &ioc->chip->HostInterruptMask);
ioc->mask_interrupts = 0;
}
union reply_descriptor {
u64 word;
struct {
u32 low;
u32 high;
} u;
};
/**
* _base_interrupt - MPT adapter (IOC) specific interrupt handler.
* @irq: irq number (not used)
* @bus_id: bus identifier cookie == pointer to MPT_ADAPTER structure
* @r: pt_regs pointer (not used)
*
* Return IRQ_HANDLE if processed, else IRQ_NONE.
*/
static irqreturn_t
_base_interrupt(int irq, void *bus_id)
{
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
struct adapter_reply_queue *reply_q = bus_id;
union reply_descriptor rd;
u32 completed_cmds;
u8 request_desript_type;
u16 smid;
u8 cb_idx;
u32 reply;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
u8 msix_index = reply_q->msix_index;
struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc = reply_q->ioc;
Mpi2ReplyDescriptorsUnion_t *rpf;
u8 rc;
if (ioc->mask_interrupts)
return IRQ_NONE;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (!atomic_add_unless(&reply_q->busy, 1, 1))
return IRQ_NONE;
rpf = &reply_q->reply_post_free[reply_q->reply_post_host_index];
request_desript_type = rpf->Default.ReplyFlags
& MPI2_RPY_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_TYPE_MASK;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (request_desript_type == MPI2_RPY_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_UNUSED) {
atomic_dec(&reply_q->busy);
return IRQ_NONE;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
}
completed_cmds = 0;
cb_idx = 0xFF;
do {
rd.word = le64_to_cpu(rpf->Words);
if (rd.u.low == UINT_MAX || rd.u.high == UINT_MAX)
goto out;
reply = 0;
smid = le16_to_cpu(rpf->Default.DescriptorTypeDependent1);
if (request_desript_type ==
MPI2_RPY_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_ADDRESS_REPLY) {
reply = le32_to_cpu
(rpf->AddressReply.ReplyFrameAddress);
if (reply > ioc->reply_dma_max_address ||
reply < ioc->reply_dma_min_address)
reply = 0;
} else if (request_desript_type ==
MPI2_RPY_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_TARGET_COMMAND_BUFFER)
goto next;
else if (request_desript_type ==
MPI2_RPY_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_TARGETASSIST_SUCCESS)
goto next;
if (smid) {
cb_idx = _base_get_cb_idx(ioc, smid);
if ((likely(cb_idx < MPT_MAX_CALLBACKS))
&& (likely(mpt_callbacks[cb_idx] != NULL))) {
rc = mpt_callbacks[cb_idx](ioc, smid,
msix_index, reply);
if (reply)
_base_display_reply_info(ioc, smid,
msix_index, reply);
if (rc)
mpt2sas_base_free_smid(ioc, smid);
}
}
if (!smid)
_base_async_event(ioc, msix_index, reply);
/* reply free queue handling */
if (reply) {
ioc->reply_free_host_index =
(ioc->reply_free_host_index ==
(ioc->reply_free_queue_depth - 1)) ?
0 : ioc->reply_free_host_index + 1;
ioc->reply_free[ioc->reply_free_host_index] =
cpu_to_le32(reply);
wmb();
writel(ioc->reply_free_host_index,
&ioc->chip->ReplyFreeHostIndex);
}
next:
rpf->Words = cpu_to_le64(ULLONG_MAX);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
reply_q->reply_post_host_index =
(reply_q->reply_post_host_index ==
(ioc->reply_post_queue_depth - 1)) ? 0 :
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
reply_q->reply_post_host_index + 1;
request_desript_type =
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
reply_q->reply_post_free[reply_q->reply_post_host_index].
Default.ReplyFlags & MPI2_RPY_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_TYPE_MASK;
completed_cmds++;
if (request_desript_type == MPI2_RPY_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_UNUSED)
goto out;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (!reply_q->reply_post_host_index)
rpf = reply_q->reply_post_free;
else
rpf++;
} while (1);
out:
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (!completed_cmds) {
atomic_dec(&reply_q->busy);
return IRQ_NONE;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
}
wmb();
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (ioc->is_warpdrive) {
writel(reply_q->reply_post_host_index,
ioc->reply_post_host_index[msix_index]);
atomic_dec(&reply_q->busy);
return IRQ_HANDLED;
}
writel(reply_q->reply_post_host_index | (msix_index <<
MPI2_RPHI_MSIX_INDEX_SHIFT), &ioc->chip->ReplyPostHostIndex);
atomic_dec(&reply_q->busy);
return IRQ_HANDLED;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
/**
* _base_is_controller_msix_enabled - is controller support muli-reply queues
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
*/
static inline int
_base_is_controller_msix_enabled(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
return (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_MSI_X_INDEX) && ioc->msix_enable;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_flush_reply_queues - flushing the MSIX reply queues
* @ioc: per adapter object
* Context: ISR conext
*
* Called when a Task Management request has completed. We want
* to flush the other reply queues so all the outstanding IO has been
* completed back to OS before we process the TM completetion.
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_flush_reply_queues(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
struct adapter_reply_queue *reply_q;
/* If MSIX capability is turned off
* then multi-queues are not enabled
*/
if (!_base_is_controller_msix_enabled(ioc))
return;
list_for_each_entry(reply_q, &ioc->reply_queue_list, list) {
if (ioc->shost_recovery)
return;
/* TMs are on msix_index == 0 */
if (reply_q->msix_index == 0)
continue;
_base_interrupt(reply_q->vector, (void *)reply_q);
}
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_release_callback_handler - clear interrupt callback handler
* @cb_idx: callback index
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_release_callback_handler(u8 cb_idx)
{
mpt_callbacks[cb_idx] = NULL;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_register_callback_handler - obtain index for the interrupt callback handler
* @cb_func: callback function
*
* Returns cb_func.
*/
u8
mpt2sas_base_register_callback_handler(MPT_CALLBACK cb_func)
{
u8 cb_idx;
for (cb_idx = MPT_MAX_CALLBACKS-1; cb_idx; cb_idx--)
if (mpt_callbacks[cb_idx] == NULL)
break;
mpt_callbacks[cb_idx] = cb_func;
return cb_idx;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_initialize_callback_handler - initialize the interrupt callback handler
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_initialize_callback_handler(void)
{
u8 cb_idx;
for (cb_idx = 0; cb_idx < MPT_MAX_CALLBACKS; cb_idx++)
mpt2sas_base_release_callback_handler(cb_idx);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_build_zero_len_sge - build zero length sg entry
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @paddr: virtual address for SGE
*
* Create a zero length scatter gather entry to insure the IOCs hardware has
* something to use if the target device goes brain dead and tries
* to send data even when none is asked for.
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_build_zero_len_sge(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, void *paddr)
{
u32 flags_length = (u32)((MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_LAST_ELEMENT |
MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_END_OF_BUFFER | MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_END_OF_LIST |
MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_SIMPLE_ELEMENT) <<
MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_SHIFT);
ioc->base_add_sg_single(paddr, flags_length, -1);
}
/**
* _base_add_sg_single_32 - Place a simple 32 bit SGE at address pAddr.
* @paddr: virtual address for SGE
* @flags_length: SGE flags and data transfer length
* @dma_addr: Physical address
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_add_sg_single_32(void *paddr, u32 flags_length, dma_addr_t dma_addr)
{
Mpi2SGESimple32_t *sgel = paddr;
flags_length |= (MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_32_BIT_ADDRESSING |
MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_SYSTEM_ADDRESS) << MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_SHIFT;
sgel->FlagsLength = cpu_to_le32(flags_length);
sgel->Address = cpu_to_le32(dma_addr);
}
/**
* _base_add_sg_single_64 - Place a simple 64 bit SGE at address pAddr.
* @paddr: virtual address for SGE
* @flags_length: SGE flags and data transfer length
* @dma_addr: Physical address
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_add_sg_single_64(void *paddr, u32 flags_length, dma_addr_t dma_addr)
{
Mpi2SGESimple64_t *sgel = paddr;
flags_length |= (MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_64_BIT_ADDRESSING |
MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_SYSTEM_ADDRESS) << MPI2_SGE_FLAGS_SHIFT;
sgel->FlagsLength = cpu_to_le32(flags_length);
sgel->Address = cpu_to_le64(dma_addr);
}
#define convert_to_kb(x) ((x) << (PAGE_SHIFT - 10))
/**
* _base_config_dma_addressing - set dma addressing
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @pdev: PCI device struct
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_config_dma_addressing(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, struct pci_dev *pdev)
{
struct sysinfo s;
char *desc = NULL;
if (sizeof(dma_addr_t) > 4) {
const uint64_t required_mask =
dma_get_required_mask(&pdev->dev);
if ((required_mask > DMA_BIT_MASK(32)) && !pci_set_dma_mask(pdev,
DMA_BIT_MASK(64)) && !pci_set_consistent_dma_mask(pdev,
DMA_BIT_MASK(64))) {
ioc->base_add_sg_single = &_base_add_sg_single_64;
ioc->sge_size = sizeof(Mpi2SGESimple64_t);
desc = "64";
goto out;
}
}
if (!pci_set_dma_mask(pdev, DMA_BIT_MASK(32))
&& !pci_set_consistent_dma_mask(pdev, DMA_BIT_MASK(32))) {
ioc->base_add_sg_single = &_base_add_sg_single_32;
ioc->sge_size = sizeof(Mpi2SGESimple32_t);
desc = "32";
} else
return -ENODEV;
out:
si_meminfo(&s);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s BIT PCI BUS DMA ADDRESSING SUPPORTED, "
"total mem (%ld kB)\n", ioc->name, desc, convert_to_kb(s.totalram));
return 0;
}
/**
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
* _base_check_enable_msix - checks MSIX capabable.
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
* Check to see if card is capable of MSIX, and set number
* of available msix vectors
*/
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
static int
_base_check_enable_msix(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
int base;
u16 message_control;
/* Check whether controller SAS2008 B0 controller,
if it is SAS2008 B0 controller use IO-APIC instead of MSIX */
if (ioc->pdev->device == MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2008 &&
ioc->pdev->revision == 0x01) {
return -EINVAL;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
base = pci_find_capability(ioc->pdev, PCI_CAP_ID_MSIX);
if (!base) {
dfailprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "msix not "
"supported\n", ioc->name));
return -EINVAL;
}
/* get msix vector count */
/* NUMA_IO not supported for older controllers */
if (ioc->pdev->device == MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2004 ||
ioc->pdev->device == MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2008 ||
ioc->pdev->device == MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2108_1 ||
ioc->pdev->device == MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2108_2 ||
ioc->pdev->device == MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2108_3 ||
ioc->pdev->device == MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2116_1 ||
ioc->pdev->device == MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2116_2)
ioc->msix_vector_count = 1;
else {
pci_read_config_word(ioc->pdev, base + 2, &message_control);
ioc->msix_vector_count = (message_control & 0x3FF) + 1;
}
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "msix is supported, "
"vector_count(%d)\n", ioc->name, ioc->msix_vector_count));
return 0;
}
/**
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
* _base_free_irq - free irq
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
* Freeing respective reply_queue from the list.
*/
static void
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
_base_free_irq(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
struct adapter_reply_queue *reply_q, *next;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (list_empty(&ioc->reply_queue_list))
return;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
list_for_each_entry_safe(reply_q, next, &ioc->reply_queue_list, list) {
list_del(&reply_q->list);
synchronize_irq(reply_q->vector);
free_irq(reply_q->vector, reply_q);
kfree(reply_q);
}
}
/**
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
* _base_request_irq - request irq
* @ioc: per adapter object
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
* @index: msix index into vector table
* @vector: irq vector
*
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
* Inserting respective reply_queue into the list.
*/
static int
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
_base_request_irq(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u8 index, u32 vector)
{
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
struct adapter_reply_queue *reply_q;
int r;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
reply_q = kzalloc(sizeof(struct adapter_reply_queue), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!reply_q) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "unable to allocate memory %d!\n",
ioc->name, (int)sizeof(struct adapter_reply_queue));
return -ENOMEM;
}
reply_q->ioc = ioc;
reply_q->msix_index = index;
reply_q->vector = vector;
atomic_set(&reply_q->busy, 0);
if (ioc->msix_enable)
snprintf(reply_q->name, MPT_NAME_LENGTH, "%s%d-msix%d",
MPT2SAS_DRIVER_NAME, ioc->id, index);
else
snprintf(reply_q->name, MPT_NAME_LENGTH, "%s%d",
MPT2SAS_DRIVER_NAME, ioc->id);
r = request_irq(vector, _base_interrupt, IRQF_SHARED, reply_q->name,
reply_q);
if (r) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "unable to allocate interrupt %d!\n",
reply_q->name, vector);
kfree(reply_q);
return -EBUSY;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&reply_q->list);
list_add_tail(&reply_q->list, &ioc->reply_queue_list);
return 0;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
/**
* _base_assign_reply_queues - assigning msix index for each cpu
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* The enduser would need to set the affinity via /proc/irq/#/smp_affinity
*
* It would nice if we could call irq_set_affinity, however it is not
* an exported symbol
*/
static void
_base_assign_reply_queues(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
struct adapter_reply_queue *reply_q;
int cpu_id;
int cpu_grouping, loop, grouping, grouping_mod;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (!_base_is_controller_msix_enabled(ioc))
return;
memset(ioc->cpu_msix_table, 0, ioc->cpu_msix_table_sz);
/* when there are more cpus than available msix vectors,
* then group cpus togeather on same irq
*/
if (ioc->cpu_count > ioc->msix_vector_count) {
grouping = ioc->cpu_count / ioc->msix_vector_count;
grouping_mod = ioc->cpu_count % ioc->msix_vector_count;
if (grouping < 2 || (grouping == 2 && !grouping_mod))
cpu_grouping = 2;
else if (grouping < 4 || (grouping == 4 && !grouping_mod))
cpu_grouping = 4;
else if (grouping < 8 || (grouping == 8 && !grouping_mod))
cpu_grouping = 8;
else
cpu_grouping = 16;
} else
cpu_grouping = 0;
loop = 0;
reply_q = list_entry(ioc->reply_queue_list.next,
struct adapter_reply_queue, list);
for_each_online_cpu(cpu_id) {
if (!cpu_grouping) {
ioc->cpu_msix_table[cpu_id] = reply_q->msix_index;
reply_q = list_entry(reply_q->list.next,
struct adapter_reply_queue, list);
} else {
if (loop < cpu_grouping) {
ioc->cpu_msix_table[cpu_id] =
reply_q->msix_index;
loop++;
} else {
reply_q = list_entry(reply_q->list.next,
struct adapter_reply_queue, list);
ioc->cpu_msix_table[cpu_id] =
reply_q->msix_index;
loop = 1;
}
}
}
}
/**
* _base_disable_msix - disables msix
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
*/
static void
_base_disable_msix(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
if (ioc->msix_enable) {
pci_disable_msix(ioc->pdev);
ioc->msix_enable = 0;
}
}
/**
* _base_enable_msix - enables msix, failback to io_apic
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
*/
static int
_base_enable_msix(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
struct msix_entry *entries, *a;
int r;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
int i;
u8 try_msix = 0;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ioc->reply_queue_list);
if (msix_disable == -1 || msix_disable == 0)
try_msix = 1;
if (!try_msix)
goto try_ioapic;
if (_base_check_enable_msix(ioc) != 0)
goto try_ioapic;
ioc->reply_queue_count = min_t(int, ioc->cpu_count,
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
ioc->msix_vector_count);
entries = kcalloc(ioc->reply_queue_count, sizeof(struct msix_entry),
GFP_KERNEL);
if (!entries) {
dfailprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "kcalloc "
"failed @ at %s:%d/%s() !!!\n", ioc->name, __FILE__,
__LINE__, __func__));
goto try_ioapic;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
for (i = 0, a = entries; i < ioc->reply_queue_count; i++, a++)
a->entry = i;
r = pci_enable_msix(ioc->pdev, entries, ioc->reply_queue_count);
if (r) {
dfailprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "pci_enable_msix "
"failed (r=%d) !!!\n", ioc->name, r));
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
kfree(entries);
goto try_ioapic;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
ioc->msix_enable = 1;
for (i = 0, a = entries; i < ioc->reply_queue_count; i++, a++) {
r = _base_request_irq(ioc, i, a->vector);
if (r) {
_base_free_irq(ioc);
_base_disable_msix(ioc);
kfree(entries);
goto try_ioapic;
}
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
kfree(entries);
return 0;
/* failback to io_apic interrupt routing */
try_ioapic:
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
r = _base_request_irq(ioc, 0, ioc->pdev->irq);
return r;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_map_resources - map in controller resources (io/irq/memap)
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
int
mpt2sas_base_map_resources(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = ioc->pdev;
u32 memap_sz;
u32 pio_sz;
int i, r = 0;
u64 pio_chip = 0;
u64 chip_phys = 0;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
struct adapter_reply_queue *reply_q;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n",
ioc->name, __func__));
ioc->bars = pci_select_bars(pdev, IORESOURCE_MEM);
if (pci_enable_device_mem(pdev)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_WARN_FMT "pci_enable_device_mem: "
"failed\n", ioc->name);
return -ENODEV;
}
if (pci_request_selected_regions(pdev, ioc->bars,
MPT2SAS_DRIVER_NAME)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_WARN_FMT "pci_request_selected_regions: "
"failed\n", ioc->name);
r = -ENODEV;
goto out_fail;
}
/* AER (Advanced Error Reporting) hooks */
pci_enable_pcie_error_reporting(pdev);
pci_set_master(pdev);
if (_base_config_dma_addressing(ioc, pdev) != 0) {
printk(MPT2SAS_WARN_FMT "no suitable DMA mask for %s\n",
ioc->name, pci_name(pdev));
r = -ENODEV;
goto out_fail;
}
for (i = 0, memap_sz = 0, pio_sz = 0 ; i < DEVICE_COUNT_RESOURCE; i++) {
if (pci_resource_flags(pdev, i) & IORESOURCE_IO) {
if (pio_sz)
continue;
pio_chip = (u64)pci_resource_start(pdev, i);
pio_sz = pci_resource_len(pdev, i);
} else {
if (memap_sz)
continue;
/* verify memory resource is valid before using */
if (pci_resource_flags(pdev, i) & IORESOURCE_MEM) {
ioc->chip_phys = pci_resource_start(pdev, i);
chip_phys = (u64)ioc->chip_phys;
memap_sz = pci_resource_len(pdev, i);
ioc->chip = ioremap(ioc->chip_phys, memap_sz);
if (ioc->chip == NULL) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "unable to map "
"adapter memory!\n", ioc->name);
r = -EINVAL;
goto out_fail;
}
}
}
}
_base_mask_interrupts(ioc);
r = _base_enable_msix(ioc);
if (r)
goto out_fail;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
list_for_each_entry(reply_q, &ioc->reply_queue_list, list)
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: IRQ %d\n",
reply_q->name, ((ioc->msix_enable) ? "PCI-MSI-X enabled" :
"IO-APIC enabled"), reply_q->vector);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "iomem(0x%016llx), mapped(0x%p), size(%d)\n",
ioc->name, (unsigned long long)chip_phys, ioc->chip, memap_sz);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "ioport(0x%016llx), size(%d)\n",
ioc->name, (unsigned long long)pio_chip, pio_sz);
/* Save PCI configuration state for recovery from PCI AER/EEH errors */
pci_save_state(pdev);
return 0;
out_fail:
if (ioc->chip_phys)
iounmap(ioc->chip);
ioc->chip_phys = 0;
pci_release_selected_regions(ioc->pdev, ioc->bars);
pci_disable_pcie_error_reporting(pdev);
pci_disable_device(pdev);
return r;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame - obtain request mf pointer
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index(smid zero is invalid)
*
* Returns virt pointer to message frame.
*/
void *
mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid)
{
return (void *)(ioc->request + (smid * ioc->request_sz));
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_get_sense_buffer - obtain a sense buffer assigned to a mf request
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
*
* Returns virt pointer to sense buffer.
*/
void *
mpt2sas_base_get_sense_buffer(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid)
{
return (void *)(ioc->sense + ((smid - 1) * SCSI_SENSE_BUFFERSIZE));
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_get_sense_buffer_dma - obtain a sense buffer assigned to a mf request
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
*
* Returns phys pointer to the low 32bit address of the sense buffer.
*/
__le32
mpt2sas_base_get_sense_buffer_dma(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid)
{
return cpu_to_le32(ioc->sense_dma +
((smid - 1) * SCSI_SENSE_BUFFERSIZE));
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_get_reply_virt_addr - obtain reply frames virt address
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @phys_addr: lower 32 physical addr of the reply
*
* Converts 32bit lower physical addr into a virt address.
*/
void *
mpt2sas_base_get_reply_virt_addr(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u32 phys_addr)
{
if (!phys_addr)
return NULL;
return ioc->reply + (phys_addr - (u32)ioc->reply_dma);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_get_smid - obtain a free smid from internal queue
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @cb_idx: callback index
*
* Returns smid (zero is invalid)
*/
u16
mpt2sas_base_get_smid(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u8 cb_idx)
{
unsigned long flags;
struct request_tracker *request;
u16 smid;
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
if (list_empty(&ioc->internal_free_list)) {
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: smid not available\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return 0;
}
request = list_entry(ioc->internal_free_list.next,
struct request_tracker, tracker_list);
request->cb_idx = cb_idx;
smid = request->smid;
list_del(&request->tracker_list);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
return smid;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_get_smid_scsiio - obtain a free smid from scsiio queue
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @cb_idx: callback index
* @scmd: pointer to scsi command object
*
* Returns smid (zero is invalid)
*/
u16
mpt2sas_base_get_smid_scsiio(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u8 cb_idx,
struct scsi_cmnd *scmd)
{
unsigned long flags;
struct scsiio_tracker *request;
u16 smid;
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
if (list_empty(&ioc->free_list)) {
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: smid not available\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return 0;
}
request = list_entry(ioc->free_list.next,
struct scsiio_tracker, tracker_list);
request->scmd = scmd;
request->cb_idx = cb_idx;
smid = request->smid;
list_del(&request->tracker_list);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
return smid;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_get_smid_hpr - obtain a free smid from hi-priority queue
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @cb_idx: callback index
*
* Returns smid (zero is invalid)
*/
u16
mpt2sas_base_get_smid_hpr(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u8 cb_idx)
{
unsigned long flags;
struct request_tracker *request;
u16 smid;
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
if (list_empty(&ioc->hpr_free_list)) {
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
return 0;
}
request = list_entry(ioc->hpr_free_list.next,
struct request_tracker, tracker_list);
request->cb_idx = cb_idx;
smid = request->smid;
list_del(&request->tracker_list);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
return smid;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_free_smid - put smid back on free_list
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_free_smid(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid)
{
unsigned long flags;
int i;
struct chain_tracker *chain_req, *next;
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
if (smid < ioc->hi_priority_smid) {
/* scsiio queue */
i = smid - 1;
if (!list_empty(&ioc->scsi_lookup[i].chain_list)) {
list_for_each_entry_safe(chain_req, next,
&ioc->scsi_lookup[i].chain_list, tracker_list) {
list_del_init(&chain_req->tracker_list);
list_add_tail(&chain_req->tracker_list,
&ioc->free_chain_list);
}
}
ioc->scsi_lookup[i].cb_idx = 0xFF;
ioc->scsi_lookup[i].scmd = NULL;
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
ioc->scsi_lookup[i].direct_io = 0;
list_add_tail(&ioc->scsi_lookup[i].tracker_list,
&ioc->free_list);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
/*
* See _wait_for_commands_to_complete() call with regards
* to this code.
*/
if (ioc->shost_recovery && ioc->pending_io_count) {
if (ioc->pending_io_count == 1)
wake_up(&ioc->reset_wq);
ioc->pending_io_count--;
}
return;
} else if (smid < ioc->internal_smid) {
/* hi-priority */
i = smid - ioc->hi_priority_smid;
ioc->hpr_lookup[i].cb_idx = 0xFF;
list_add_tail(&ioc->hpr_lookup[i].tracker_list,
&ioc->hpr_free_list);
} else if (smid <= ioc->hba_queue_depth) {
/* internal queue */
i = smid - ioc->internal_smid;
ioc->internal_lookup[i].cb_idx = 0xFF;
list_add_tail(&ioc->internal_lookup[i].tracker_list,
&ioc->internal_free_list);
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
}
/**
* _base_writeq - 64 bit write to MMIO
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @b: data payload
* @addr: address in MMIO space
* @writeq_lock: spin lock
*
* Glue for handling an atomic 64 bit word to MMIO. This special handling takes
* care of 32 bit environment where its not quarenteed to send the entire word
* in one transfer.
*/
#ifndef writeq
static inline void _base_writeq(__u64 b, volatile void __iomem *addr,
spinlock_t *writeq_lock)
{
unsigned long flags;
__u64 data_out = cpu_to_le64(b);
spin_lock_irqsave(writeq_lock, flags);
writel((u32)(data_out), addr);
writel((u32)(data_out >> 32), (addr + 4));
spin_unlock_irqrestore(writeq_lock, flags);
}
#else
static inline void _base_writeq(__u64 b, volatile void __iomem *addr,
spinlock_t *writeq_lock)
{
writeq(cpu_to_le64(b), addr);
}
#endif
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
static inline u8
_base_get_msix_index(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
return ioc->cpu_msix_table[raw_smp_processor_id()];
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_put_smid_scsi_io - send SCSI_IO request to firmware
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
* @handle: device handle
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_scsi_io(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid, u16 handle)
{
Mpi2RequestDescriptorUnion_t descriptor;
u64 *request = (u64 *)&descriptor;
descriptor.SCSIIO.RequestFlags = MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_SCSI_IO;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
descriptor.SCSIIO.MSIxIndex = _base_get_msix_index(ioc);
descriptor.SCSIIO.SMID = cpu_to_le16(smid);
descriptor.SCSIIO.DevHandle = cpu_to_le16(handle);
descriptor.SCSIIO.LMID = 0;
_base_writeq(*request, &ioc->chip->RequestDescriptorPostLow,
&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_put_smid_hi_priority - send Task Management request to firmware
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_hi_priority(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid)
{
Mpi2RequestDescriptorUnion_t descriptor;
u64 *request = (u64 *)&descriptor;
descriptor.HighPriority.RequestFlags =
MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_HIGH_PRIORITY;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
descriptor.HighPriority.MSIxIndex = 0;
descriptor.HighPriority.SMID = cpu_to_le16(smid);
descriptor.HighPriority.LMID = 0;
descriptor.HighPriority.Reserved1 = 0;
_base_writeq(*request, &ioc->chip->RequestDescriptorPostLow,
&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_put_smid_default - Default, primarily used for config pages
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_default(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid)
{
Mpi2RequestDescriptorUnion_t descriptor;
u64 *request = (u64 *)&descriptor;
descriptor.Default.RequestFlags = MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_DEFAULT_TYPE;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
descriptor.Default.MSIxIndex = _base_get_msix_index(ioc);
descriptor.Default.SMID = cpu_to_le16(smid);
descriptor.Default.LMID = 0;
descriptor.Default.DescriptorTypeDependent = 0;
_base_writeq(*request, &ioc->chip->RequestDescriptorPostLow,
&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_put_smid_target_assist - send Target Assist/Status to firmware
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
* @io_index: value used to track the IO
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_target_assist(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid,
u16 io_index)
{
Mpi2RequestDescriptorUnion_t descriptor;
u64 *request = (u64 *)&descriptor;
descriptor.SCSITarget.RequestFlags =
MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_SCSI_TARGET;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
descriptor.SCSITarget.MSIxIndex = _base_get_msix_index(ioc);
descriptor.SCSITarget.SMID = cpu_to_le16(smid);
descriptor.SCSITarget.LMID = 0;
descriptor.SCSITarget.IoIndex = cpu_to_le16(io_index);
_base_writeq(*request, &ioc->chip->RequestDescriptorPostLow,
&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock);
}
/**
* _base_display_dell_branding - Disply branding string
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_display_dell_branding(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
char dell_branding[MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE];
if (ioc->pdev->subsystem_vendor != PCI_VENDOR_ID_DELL)
return;
memset(dell_branding, 0, MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE);
switch (ioc->pdev->subsystem_device) {
case MPT2SAS_DELL_6GBPS_SAS_HBA_SSDID:
strncpy(dell_branding, MPT2SAS_DELL_6GBPS_SAS_HBA_BRANDING,
MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE - 1);
break;
case MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_ADAPTER_SSDID:
strncpy(dell_branding, MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_ADAPTER_BRANDING,
MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE - 1);
break;
case MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_INTEGRATED_SSDID:
strncpy(dell_branding,
MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_INTEGRATED_BRANDING,
MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE - 1);
break;
case MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_MODULAR_SSDID:
strncpy(dell_branding,
MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_MODULAR_BRANDING,
MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE - 1);
break;
case MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_EMBEDDED_SSDID:
strncpy(dell_branding,
MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_EMBEDDED_BRANDING,
MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE - 1);
break;
case MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_SSDID:
strncpy(dell_branding, MPT2SAS_DELL_PERC_H200_BRANDING,
MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE - 1);
break;
case MPT2SAS_DELL_6GBPS_SAS_SSDID:
strncpy(dell_branding, MPT2SAS_DELL_6GBPS_SAS_BRANDING,
MPT2SAS_DELL_BRANDING_SIZE - 1);
break;
default:
sprintf(dell_branding, "0x%4X", ioc->pdev->subsystem_device);
break;
}
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: Vendor(0x%04X), Device(0x%04X),"
" SSVID(0x%04X), SSDID(0x%04X)\n", ioc->name, dell_branding,
ioc->pdev->vendor, ioc->pdev->device, ioc->pdev->subsystem_vendor,
ioc->pdev->subsystem_device);
}
/**
* _base_display_intel_branding - Display branding string
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_display_intel_branding(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
if (ioc->pdev->subsystem_vendor != PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL)
return;
switch (ioc->pdev->device) {
case MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2008:
switch (ioc->pdev->subsystem_device) {
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS2LL080_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS2LL080_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS2LL040_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS2LL040_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_SSD910_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_SSD910_BRANDING);
break;
default:
break;
}
case MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2308_2:
switch (ioc->pdev->subsystem_device) {
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RS25GB008_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RS25GB008_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25JB080_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25JB080_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25JB040_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25JB040_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25KB080_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25KB080_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25KB040_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25KB040_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25LB040_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25LB040_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25LB080_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_INTEL_RMS25LB080_BRANDING);
break;
default:
break;
}
default:
break;
}
}
/**
* _base_display_hp_branding - Display branding string
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_display_hp_branding(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
if (ioc->pdev->subsystem_vendor != MPT2SAS_HP_3PAR_SSVID)
return;
switch (ioc->pdev->device) {
case MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2004:
switch (ioc->pdev->subsystem_device) {
case MPT2SAS_HP_DAUGHTER_2_4_INTERNAL_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_HP_DAUGHTER_2_4_INTERNAL_BRANDING);
break;
default:
break;
}
case MPI2_MFGPAGE_DEVID_SAS2308_2:
switch (ioc->pdev->subsystem_device) {
case MPT2SAS_HP_2_4_INTERNAL_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_HP_2_4_INTERNAL_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_HP_2_4_EXTERNAL_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_HP_2_4_EXTERNAL_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_HP_1_4_INTERNAL_1_4_EXTERNAL_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_HP_1_4_INTERNAL_1_4_EXTERNAL_BRANDING);
break;
case MPT2SAS_HP_EMBEDDED_2_4_INTERNAL_SSDID:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
MPT2SAS_HP_EMBEDDED_2_4_INTERNAL_BRANDING);
break;
default:
break;
}
default:
break;
}
}
/**
* _base_display_ioc_capabilities - Disply IOC's capabilities.
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_display_ioc_capabilities(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
int i = 0;
char desc[16];
u32 iounit_pg1_flags;
u32 bios_version;
bios_version = le32_to_cpu(ioc->bios_pg3.BiosVersion);
strncpy(desc, ioc->manu_pg0.ChipName, 16);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: FWVersion(%02d.%02d.%02d.%02d), "
"ChipRevision(0x%02x), BiosVersion(%02d.%02d.%02d.%02d)\n",
ioc->name, desc,
(ioc->facts.FWVersion.Word & 0xFF000000) >> 24,
(ioc->facts.FWVersion.Word & 0x00FF0000) >> 16,
(ioc->facts.FWVersion.Word & 0x0000FF00) >> 8,
ioc->facts.FWVersion.Word & 0x000000FF,
ioc->pdev->revision,
(bios_version & 0xFF000000) >> 24,
(bios_version & 0x00FF0000) >> 16,
(bios_version & 0x0000FF00) >> 8,
bios_version & 0x000000FF);
_base_display_dell_branding(ioc);
_base_display_intel_branding(ioc);
_base_display_hp_branding(ioc);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "Protocol=(", ioc->name);
if (ioc->facts.ProtocolFlags & MPI2_IOCFACTS_PROTOCOL_SCSI_INITIATOR) {
printk("Initiator");
i++;
}
if (ioc->facts.ProtocolFlags & MPI2_IOCFACTS_PROTOCOL_SCSI_TARGET) {
printk("%sTarget", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
i = 0;
printk("), ");
printk("Capabilities=(");
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
if (!ioc->hide_ir_msg) {
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_INTEGRATED_RAID) {
printk("Raid");
i++;
}
}
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities & MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_TLR) {
printk("%sTLR", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities & MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_MULTICAST) {
printk("%sMulticast", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_BIDIRECTIONAL_TARGET) {
printk("%sBIDI Target", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities & MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_EEDP) {
printk("%sEEDP", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_SNAPSHOT_BUFFER) {
printk("%sSnapshot Buffer", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_DIAG_TRACE_BUFFER) {
printk("%sDiag Trace Buffer", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_EXTENDED_BUFFER) {
printk(KERN_INFO "%sDiag Extended Buffer", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
if (ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_TASK_SET_FULL_HANDLING) {
printk("%sTask Set Full", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
iounit_pg1_flags = le32_to_cpu(ioc->iounit_pg1.Flags);
if (!(iounit_pg1_flags & MPI2_IOUNITPAGE1_NATIVE_COMMAND_Q_DISABLE)) {
printk("%sNCQ", i ? "," : "");
i++;
}
printk(")\n");
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_update_missing_delay - change the missing delay timers
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @device_missing_delay: amount of time till device is reported missing
* @io_missing_delay: interval IO is returned when there is a missing device
*
* Return nothing.
*
* Passed on the command line, this function will modify the device missing
* delay, as well as the io missing delay. This should be called at driver
* load time.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_update_missing_delay(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc,
u16 device_missing_delay, u8 io_missing_delay)
{
u16 dmd, dmd_new, dmd_orignal;
u8 io_missing_delay_original;
u16 sz;
Mpi2SasIOUnitPage1_t *sas_iounit_pg1 = NULL;
Mpi2ConfigReply_t mpi_reply;
u8 num_phys = 0;
u16 ioc_status;
mpt2sas_config_get_number_hba_phys(ioc, &num_phys);
if (!num_phys)
return;
sz = offsetof(Mpi2SasIOUnitPage1_t, PhyData) + (num_phys *
sizeof(Mpi2SasIOUnit1PhyData_t));
sas_iounit_pg1 = kzalloc(sz, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!sas_iounit_pg1) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "failure at %s:%d/%s()!\n",
ioc->name, __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__);
goto out;
}
if ((mpt2sas_config_get_sas_iounit_pg1(ioc, &mpi_reply,
sas_iounit_pg1, sz))) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "failure at %s:%d/%s()!\n",
ioc->name, __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__);
goto out;
}
ioc_status = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.IOCStatus) &
MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK;
if (ioc_status != MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "failure at %s:%d/%s()!\n",
ioc->name, __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__);
goto out;
}
/* device missing delay */
dmd = sas_iounit_pg1->ReportDeviceMissingDelay;
if (dmd & MPI2_SASIOUNIT1_REPORT_MISSING_UNIT_16)
dmd = (dmd & MPI2_SASIOUNIT1_REPORT_MISSING_TIMEOUT_MASK) * 16;
else
dmd = dmd & MPI2_SASIOUNIT1_REPORT_MISSING_TIMEOUT_MASK;
dmd_orignal = dmd;
if (device_missing_delay > 0x7F) {
dmd = (device_missing_delay > 0x7F0) ? 0x7F0 :
device_missing_delay;
dmd = dmd / 16;
dmd |= MPI2_SASIOUNIT1_REPORT_MISSING_UNIT_16;
} else
dmd = device_missing_delay;
sas_iounit_pg1->ReportDeviceMissingDelay = dmd;
/* io missing delay */
io_missing_delay_original = sas_iounit_pg1->IODeviceMissingDelay;
sas_iounit_pg1->IODeviceMissingDelay = io_missing_delay;
if (!mpt2sas_config_set_sas_iounit_pg1(ioc, &mpi_reply, sas_iounit_pg1,
sz)) {
if (dmd & MPI2_SASIOUNIT1_REPORT_MISSING_UNIT_16)
dmd_new = (dmd &
MPI2_SASIOUNIT1_REPORT_MISSING_TIMEOUT_MASK) * 16;
else
dmd_new =
dmd & MPI2_SASIOUNIT1_REPORT_MISSING_TIMEOUT_MASK;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "device_missing_delay: old(%d), "
"new(%d)\n", ioc->name, dmd_orignal, dmd_new);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "ioc_missing_delay: old(%d), "
"new(%d)\n", ioc->name, io_missing_delay_original,
io_missing_delay);
ioc->device_missing_delay = dmd_new;
ioc->io_missing_delay = io_missing_delay;
}
out:
kfree(sas_iounit_pg1);
}
/**
* _base_static_config_pages - static start of day config pages
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_static_config_pages(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
Mpi2ConfigReply_t mpi_reply;
u32 iounit_pg1_flags;
mpt2sas_config_get_manufacturing_pg0(ioc, &mpi_reply, &ioc->manu_pg0);
if (ioc->ir_firmware)
mpt2sas_config_get_manufacturing_pg10(ioc, &mpi_reply,
&ioc->manu_pg10);
mpt2sas_config_get_bios_pg2(ioc, &mpi_reply, &ioc->bios_pg2);
mpt2sas_config_get_bios_pg3(ioc, &mpi_reply, &ioc->bios_pg3);
mpt2sas_config_get_ioc_pg8(ioc, &mpi_reply, &ioc->ioc_pg8);
mpt2sas_config_get_iounit_pg0(ioc, &mpi_reply, &ioc->iounit_pg0);
mpt2sas_config_get_iounit_pg1(ioc, &mpi_reply, &ioc->iounit_pg1);
_base_display_ioc_capabilities(ioc);
/*
* Enable task_set_full handling in iounit_pg1 when the
* facts capabilities indicate that its supported.
*/
iounit_pg1_flags = le32_to_cpu(ioc->iounit_pg1.Flags);
if ((ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_TASK_SET_FULL_HANDLING))
iounit_pg1_flags &=
~MPI2_IOUNITPAGE1_DISABLE_TASK_SET_FULL_HANDLING;
else
iounit_pg1_flags |=
MPI2_IOUNITPAGE1_DISABLE_TASK_SET_FULL_HANDLING;
ioc->iounit_pg1.Flags = cpu_to_le32(iounit_pg1_flags);
mpt2sas_config_set_iounit_pg1(ioc, &mpi_reply, &ioc->iounit_pg1);
}
/**
* _base_release_memory_pools - release memory
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Free memory allocated from _base_allocate_memory_pools.
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_release_memory_pools(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
int i;
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
if (ioc->request) {
pci_free_consistent(ioc->pdev, ioc->request_dma_sz,
ioc->request, ioc->request_dma);
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "request_pool(0x%p)"
": free\n", ioc->name, ioc->request));
ioc->request = NULL;
}
if (ioc->sense) {
pci_pool_free(ioc->sense_dma_pool, ioc->sense, ioc->sense_dma);
if (ioc->sense_dma_pool)
pci_pool_destroy(ioc->sense_dma_pool);
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "sense_pool(0x%p)"
": free\n", ioc->name, ioc->sense));
ioc->sense = NULL;
}
if (ioc->reply) {
pci_pool_free(ioc->reply_dma_pool, ioc->reply, ioc->reply_dma);
if (ioc->reply_dma_pool)
pci_pool_destroy(ioc->reply_dma_pool);
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "reply_pool(0x%p)"
": free\n", ioc->name, ioc->reply));
ioc->reply = NULL;
}
if (ioc->reply_free) {
pci_pool_free(ioc->reply_free_dma_pool, ioc->reply_free,
ioc->reply_free_dma);
if (ioc->reply_free_dma_pool)
pci_pool_destroy(ioc->reply_free_dma_pool);
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "reply_free_pool"
"(0x%p): free\n", ioc->name, ioc->reply_free));
ioc->reply_free = NULL;
}
if (ioc->reply_post_free) {
pci_pool_free(ioc->reply_post_free_dma_pool,
ioc->reply_post_free, ioc->reply_post_free_dma);
if (ioc->reply_post_free_dma_pool)
pci_pool_destroy(ioc->reply_post_free_dma_pool);
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT
"reply_post_free_pool(0x%p): free\n", ioc->name,
ioc->reply_post_free));
ioc->reply_post_free = NULL;
}
if (ioc->config_page) {
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT
"config_page(0x%p): free\n", ioc->name,
ioc->config_page));
pci_free_consistent(ioc->pdev, ioc->config_page_sz,
ioc->config_page, ioc->config_page_dma);
}
if (ioc->scsi_lookup) {
free_pages((ulong)ioc->scsi_lookup, ioc->scsi_lookup_pages);
ioc->scsi_lookup = NULL;
}
kfree(ioc->hpr_lookup);
kfree(ioc->internal_lookup);
if (ioc->chain_lookup) {
for (i = 0; i < ioc->chain_depth; i++) {
if (ioc->chain_lookup[i].chain_buffer)
pci_pool_free(ioc->chain_dma_pool,
ioc->chain_lookup[i].chain_buffer,
ioc->chain_lookup[i].chain_buffer_dma);
}
if (ioc->chain_dma_pool)
pci_pool_destroy(ioc->chain_dma_pool);
free_pages((ulong)ioc->chain_lookup, ioc->chain_pages);
ioc->chain_lookup = NULL;
}
}
/**
* _base_allocate_memory_pools - allocate start of day memory pools
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 success, anything else error
*/
static int
_base_allocate_memory_pools(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag)
{
struct mpt2sas_facts *facts;
u16 max_sge_elements;
u16 chains_needed_per_io;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
u32 sz, total_sz, reply_post_free_sz;
u32 retry_sz;
u16 max_request_credit;
int i;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
retry_sz = 0;
facts = &ioc->facts;
/* command line tunables for max sgl entries */
if (max_sgl_entries != -1) {
ioc->shost->sg_tablesize = (max_sgl_entries <
MPT2SAS_SG_DEPTH) ? max_sgl_entries :
MPT2SAS_SG_DEPTH;
} else {
ioc->shost->sg_tablesize = MPT2SAS_SG_DEPTH;
}
/* command line tunables for max controller queue depth */
if (max_queue_depth != -1 && max_queue_depth != 0) {
max_request_credit = min_t(u16, max_queue_depth +
ioc->hi_priority_depth + ioc->internal_depth,
facts->RequestCredit);
if (max_request_credit > MAX_HBA_QUEUE_DEPTH)
max_request_credit = MAX_HBA_QUEUE_DEPTH;
} else
max_request_credit = min_t(u16, facts->RequestCredit,
MAX_HBA_QUEUE_DEPTH);
ioc->hba_queue_depth = max_request_credit;
ioc->hi_priority_depth = facts->HighPriorityCredit;
ioc->internal_depth = ioc->hi_priority_depth + 5;
/* request frame size */
ioc->request_sz = facts->IOCRequestFrameSize * 4;
/* reply frame size */
ioc->reply_sz = facts->ReplyFrameSize * 4;
retry_allocation:
total_sz = 0;
/* calculate number of sg elements left over in the 1st frame */
max_sge_elements = ioc->request_sz - ((sizeof(Mpi2SCSIIORequest_t) -
sizeof(Mpi2SGEIOUnion_t)) + ioc->sge_size);
ioc->max_sges_in_main_message = max_sge_elements/ioc->sge_size;
/* now do the same for a chain buffer */
max_sge_elements = ioc->request_sz - ioc->sge_size;
ioc->max_sges_in_chain_message = max_sge_elements/ioc->sge_size;
ioc->chain_offset_value_for_main_message =
((sizeof(Mpi2SCSIIORequest_t) - sizeof(Mpi2SGEIOUnion_t)) +
(ioc->max_sges_in_chain_message * ioc->sge_size)) / 4;
/*
* MPT2SAS_SG_DEPTH = CONFIG_FUSION_MAX_SGE
*/
chains_needed_per_io = ((ioc->shost->sg_tablesize -
ioc->max_sges_in_main_message)/ioc->max_sges_in_chain_message)
+ 1;
if (chains_needed_per_io > facts->MaxChainDepth) {
chains_needed_per_io = facts->MaxChainDepth;
ioc->shost->sg_tablesize = min_t(u16,
ioc->max_sges_in_main_message + (ioc->max_sges_in_chain_message
* chains_needed_per_io), ioc->shost->sg_tablesize);
}
ioc->chains_needed_per_io = chains_needed_per_io;
/* reply free queue sizing - taking into account for 64 FW events */
ioc->reply_free_queue_depth = ioc->hba_queue_depth + 64;
/* calculate reply descriptor post queue depth */
ioc->reply_post_queue_depth = ioc->hba_queue_depth +
ioc->reply_free_queue_depth + 1;
/* align the reply post queue on the next 16 count boundary */
if (ioc->reply_post_queue_depth % 16)
ioc->reply_post_queue_depth += 16 -
(ioc->reply_post_queue_depth % 16);
if (ioc->reply_post_queue_depth >
facts->MaxReplyDescriptorPostQueueDepth) {
ioc->reply_post_queue_depth =
facts->MaxReplyDescriptorPostQueueDepth -
(facts->MaxReplyDescriptorPostQueueDepth % 16);
ioc->hba_queue_depth =
((ioc->reply_post_queue_depth - 64) / 2) - 1;
ioc->reply_free_queue_depth = ioc->hba_queue_depth + 64;
}
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "scatter gather: "
"sge_in_main_msg(%d), sge_per_chain(%d), sge_per_io(%d), "
"chains_per_io(%d)\n", ioc->name, ioc->max_sges_in_main_message,
ioc->max_sges_in_chain_message, ioc->shost->sg_tablesize,
ioc->chains_needed_per_io));
ioc->scsiio_depth = ioc->hba_queue_depth -
ioc->hi_priority_depth - ioc->internal_depth;
/* set the scsi host can_queue depth
* with some internal commands that could be outstanding
*/
ioc->shost->can_queue = ioc->scsiio_depth;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "scsi host: "
"can_queue depth (%d)\n", ioc->name, ioc->shost->can_queue));
/* contiguous pool for request and chains, 16 byte align, one extra "
* "frame for smid=0
*/
ioc->chain_depth = ioc->chains_needed_per_io * ioc->scsiio_depth;
sz = ((ioc->scsiio_depth + 1) * ioc->request_sz);
/* hi-priority queue */
sz += (ioc->hi_priority_depth * ioc->request_sz);
/* internal queue */
sz += (ioc->internal_depth * ioc->request_sz);
ioc->request_dma_sz = sz;
ioc->request = pci_alloc_consistent(ioc->pdev, sz, &ioc->request_dma);
if (!ioc->request) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "request pool: pci_alloc_consistent "
"failed: hba_depth(%d), chains_per_io(%d), frame_sz(%d), "
"total(%d kB)\n", ioc->name, ioc->hba_queue_depth,
ioc->chains_needed_per_io, ioc->request_sz, sz/1024);
if (ioc->scsiio_depth < MPT2SAS_SAS_QUEUE_DEPTH)
goto out;
retry_sz += 64;
ioc->hba_queue_depth = max_request_credit - retry_sz;
goto retry_allocation;
}
if (retry_sz)
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "request pool: pci_alloc_consistent "
"succeed: hba_depth(%d), chains_per_io(%d), frame_sz(%d), "
"total(%d kb)\n", ioc->name, ioc->hba_queue_depth,
ioc->chains_needed_per_io, ioc->request_sz, sz/1024);
/* hi-priority queue */
ioc->hi_priority = ioc->request + ((ioc->scsiio_depth + 1) *
ioc->request_sz);
ioc->hi_priority_dma = ioc->request_dma + ((ioc->scsiio_depth + 1) *
ioc->request_sz);
/* internal queue */
ioc->internal = ioc->hi_priority + (ioc->hi_priority_depth *
ioc->request_sz);
ioc->internal_dma = ioc->hi_priority_dma + (ioc->hi_priority_depth *
ioc->request_sz);
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "request pool(0x%p): "
"depth(%d), frame_size(%d), pool_size(%d kB)\n", ioc->name,
ioc->request, ioc->hba_queue_depth, ioc->request_sz,
(ioc->hba_queue_depth * ioc->request_sz)/1024));
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "request pool: dma(0x%llx)\n",
ioc->name, (unsigned long long) ioc->request_dma));
total_sz += sz;
sz = ioc->scsiio_depth * sizeof(struct scsiio_tracker);
ioc->scsi_lookup_pages = get_order(sz);
ioc->scsi_lookup = (struct scsiio_tracker *)__get_free_pages(
GFP_KERNEL, ioc->scsi_lookup_pages);
if (!ioc->scsi_lookup) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "scsi_lookup: get_free_pages failed, "
"sz(%d)\n", ioc->name, (int)sz);
goto out;
}
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "scsiio(0x%p): "
"depth(%d)\n", ioc->name, ioc->request,
ioc->scsiio_depth));
ioc->chain_depth = min_t(u32, ioc->chain_depth, MAX_CHAIN_DEPTH);
sz = ioc->chain_depth * sizeof(struct chain_tracker);
ioc->chain_pages = get_order(sz);
ioc->chain_lookup = (struct chain_tracker *)__get_free_pages(
GFP_KERNEL, ioc->chain_pages);
if (!ioc->chain_lookup) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "chain_lookup: get_free_pages failed, "
"sz(%d)\n", ioc->name, (int)sz);
goto out;
}
ioc->chain_dma_pool = pci_pool_create("chain pool", ioc->pdev,
ioc->request_sz, 16, 0);
if (!ioc->chain_dma_pool) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "chain_dma_pool: pci_pool_create "
"failed\n", ioc->name);
goto out;
}
for (i = 0; i < ioc->chain_depth; i++) {
ioc->chain_lookup[i].chain_buffer = pci_pool_alloc(
ioc->chain_dma_pool , GFP_KERNEL,
&ioc->chain_lookup[i].chain_buffer_dma);
if (!ioc->chain_lookup[i].chain_buffer) {
ioc->chain_depth = i;
goto chain_done;
}
total_sz += ioc->request_sz;
}
chain_done:
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "chain pool depth"
"(%d), frame_size(%d), pool_size(%d kB)\n", ioc->name,
ioc->chain_depth, ioc->request_sz, ((ioc->chain_depth *
ioc->request_sz))/1024));
/* initialize hi-priority queue smid's */
ioc->hpr_lookup = kcalloc(ioc->hi_priority_depth,
sizeof(struct request_tracker), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ioc->hpr_lookup) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "hpr_lookup: kcalloc failed\n",
ioc->name);
goto out;
}
ioc->hi_priority_smid = ioc->scsiio_depth + 1;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "hi_priority(0x%p): "
"depth(%d), start smid(%d)\n", ioc->name, ioc->hi_priority,
ioc->hi_priority_depth, ioc->hi_priority_smid));
/* initialize internal queue smid's */
ioc->internal_lookup = kcalloc(ioc->internal_depth,
sizeof(struct request_tracker), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ioc->internal_lookup) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "internal_lookup: kcalloc failed\n",
ioc->name);
goto out;
}
ioc->internal_smid = ioc->hi_priority_smid + ioc->hi_priority_depth;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "internal(0x%p): "
"depth(%d), start smid(%d)\n", ioc->name, ioc->internal,
ioc->internal_depth, ioc->internal_smid));
/* sense buffers, 4 byte align */
sz = ioc->scsiio_depth * SCSI_SENSE_BUFFERSIZE;
ioc->sense_dma_pool = pci_pool_create("sense pool", ioc->pdev, sz, 4,
0);
if (!ioc->sense_dma_pool) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "sense pool: pci_pool_create failed\n",
ioc->name);
goto out;
}
ioc->sense = pci_pool_alloc(ioc->sense_dma_pool , GFP_KERNEL,
&ioc->sense_dma);
if (!ioc->sense) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "sense pool: pci_pool_alloc failed\n",
ioc->name);
goto out;
}
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT
"sense pool(0x%p): depth(%d), element_size(%d), pool_size"
"(%d kB)\n", ioc->name, ioc->sense, ioc->scsiio_depth,
SCSI_SENSE_BUFFERSIZE, sz/1024));
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "sense_dma(0x%llx)\n",
ioc->name, (unsigned long long)ioc->sense_dma));
total_sz += sz;
/* reply pool, 4 byte align */
sz = ioc->reply_free_queue_depth * ioc->reply_sz;
ioc->reply_dma_pool = pci_pool_create("reply pool", ioc->pdev, sz, 4,
0);
if (!ioc->reply_dma_pool) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "reply pool: pci_pool_create failed\n",
ioc->name);
goto out;
}
ioc->reply = pci_pool_alloc(ioc->reply_dma_pool , GFP_KERNEL,
&ioc->reply_dma);
if (!ioc->reply) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "reply pool: pci_pool_alloc failed\n",
ioc->name);
goto out;
}
ioc->reply_dma_min_address = (u32)(ioc->reply_dma);
ioc->reply_dma_max_address = (u32)(ioc->reply_dma) + sz;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "reply pool(0x%p): depth"
"(%d), frame_size(%d), pool_size(%d kB)\n", ioc->name, ioc->reply,
ioc->reply_free_queue_depth, ioc->reply_sz, sz/1024));
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "reply_dma(0x%llx)\n",
ioc->name, (unsigned long long)ioc->reply_dma));
total_sz += sz;
/* reply free queue, 16 byte align */
sz = ioc->reply_free_queue_depth * 4;
ioc->reply_free_dma_pool = pci_pool_create("reply_free pool",
ioc->pdev, sz, 16, 0);
if (!ioc->reply_free_dma_pool) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "reply_free pool: pci_pool_create "
"failed\n", ioc->name);
goto out;
}
ioc->reply_free = pci_pool_alloc(ioc->reply_free_dma_pool , GFP_KERNEL,
&ioc->reply_free_dma);
if (!ioc->reply_free) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "reply_free pool: pci_pool_alloc "
"failed\n", ioc->name);
goto out;
}
memset(ioc->reply_free, 0, sz);
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "reply_free pool(0x%p): "
"depth(%d), element_size(%d), pool_size(%d kB)\n", ioc->name,
ioc->reply_free, ioc->reply_free_queue_depth, 4, sz/1024));
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "reply_free_dma"
"(0x%llx)\n", ioc->name, (unsigned long long)ioc->reply_free_dma));
total_sz += sz;
/* reply post queue, 16 byte align */
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
reply_post_free_sz = ioc->reply_post_queue_depth *
sizeof(Mpi2DefaultReplyDescriptor_t);
if (_base_is_controller_msix_enabled(ioc))
sz = reply_post_free_sz * ioc->reply_queue_count;
else
sz = reply_post_free_sz;
ioc->reply_post_free_dma_pool = pci_pool_create("reply_post_free pool",
ioc->pdev, sz, 16, 0);
if (!ioc->reply_post_free_dma_pool) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "reply_post_free pool: pci_pool_create "
"failed\n", ioc->name);
goto out;
}
ioc->reply_post_free = pci_pool_alloc(ioc->reply_post_free_dma_pool ,
GFP_KERNEL, &ioc->reply_post_free_dma);
if (!ioc->reply_post_free) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "reply_post_free pool: pci_pool_alloc "
"failed\n", ioc->name);
goto out;
}
memset(ioc->reply_post_free, 0, sz);
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "reply post free pool"
"(0x%p): depth(%d), element_size(%d), pool_size(%d kB)\n",
ioc->name, ioc->reply_post_free, ioc->reply_post_queue_depth, 8,
sz/1024));
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "reply_post_free_dma = "
"(0x%llx)\n", ioc->name, (unsigned long long)
ioc->reply_post_free_dma));
total_sz += sz;
ioc->config_page_sz = 512;
ioc->config_page = pci_alloc_consistent(ioc->pdev,
ioc->config_page_sz, &ioc->config_page_dma);
if (!ioc->config_page) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "config page: pci_pool_alloc "
"failed\n", ioc->name);
goto out;
}
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "config page(0x%p): size"
"(%d)\n", ioc->name, ioc->config_page, ioc->config_page_sz));
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "config_page_dma"
"(0x%llx)\n", ioc->name, (unsigned long long)ioc->config_page_dma));
total_sz += ioc->config_page_sz;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "Allocated physical memory: size(%d kB)\n",
ioc->name, total_sz/1024);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "Current Controller Queue Depth(%d), "
"Max Controller Queue Depth(%d)\n",
ioc->name, ioc->shost->can_queue, facts->RequestCredit);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "Scatter Gather Elements per IO(%d)\n",
ioc->name, ioc->shost->sg_tablesize);
return 0;
out:
return -ENOMEM;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate - Get the current state of a MPT adapter.
* @ioc: Pointer to MPT_ADAPTER structure
* @cooked: Request raw or cooked IOC state
*
* Returns all IOC Doorbell register bits if cooked==0, else just the
* Doorbell bits in MPI_IOC_STATE_MASK.
*/
u32
mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int cooked)
{
u32 s, sc;
s = readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell);
sc = s & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK;
return cooked ? sc : s;
}
/**
* _base_wait_on_iocstate - waiting on a particular ioc state
* @ioc_state: controller state { READY, OPERATIONAL, or RESET }
* @timeout: timeout in second
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_wait_on_iocstate(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u32 ioc_state, int timeout,
int sleep_flag)
{
u32 count, cntdn;
u32 current_state;
count = 0;
cntdn = (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP) ? 1000*timeout : 2000*timeout;
do {
current_state = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 1);
if (current_state == ioc_state)
return 0;
if (count && current_state == MPI2_IOC_STATE_FAULT)
break;
if (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP)
msleep(1);
else
udelay(500);
count++;
} while (--cntdn);
return current_state;
}
/**
* _base_wait_for_doorbell_int - waiting for controller interrupt(generated by
* a write to the doorbell)
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @timeout: timeout in second
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*
* Notes: MPI2_HIS_IOC2SYS_DB_STATUS - set to one when IOC writes to doorbell.
*/
static int
_base_wait_for_doorbell_int(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int timeout,
int sleep_flag)
{
u32 cntdn, count;
u32 int_status;
count = 0;
cntdn = (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP) ? 1000*timeout : 2000*timeout;
do {
int_status = readl(&ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus);
if (int_status & MPI2_HIS_IOC2SYS_DB_STATUS) {
dhsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: "
"successful count(%d), timeout(%d)\n", ioc->name,
__func__, count, timeout));
return 0;
}
if (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP)
msleep(1);
else
udelay(500);
count++;
} while (--cntdn);
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed due to timeout count(%d), "
"int_status(%x)!\n", ioc->name, __func__, count, int_status);
return -EFAULT;
}
/**
* _base_wait_for_doorbell_ack - waiting for controller to read the doorbell.
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @timeout: timeout in second
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*
* Notes: MPI2_HIS_SYS2IOC_DB_STATUS - set to one when host writes to
* doorbell.
*/
static int
_base_wait_for_doorbell_ack(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int timeout,
int sleep_flag)
{
u32 cntdn, count;
u32 int_status;
u32 doorbell;
count = 0;
cntdn = (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP) ? 1000*timeout : 2000*timeout;
do {
int_status = readl(&ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus);
if (!(int_status & MPI2_HIS_SYS2IOC_DB_STATUS)) {
dhsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: "
"successful count(%d), timeout(%d)\n", ioc->name,
__func__, count, timeout));
return 0;
} else if (int_status & MPI2_HIS_IOC2SYS_DB_STATUS) {
doorbell = readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell);
if ((doorbell & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) ==
MPI2_IOC_STATE_FAULT) {
mpt2sas_base_fault_info(ioc , doorbell);
return -EFAULT;
}
} else if (int_status == 0xFFFFFFFF)
goto out;
if (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP)
msleep(1);
else
udelay(500);
count++;
} while (--cntdn);
out:
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed due to timeout count(%d), "
"int_status(%x)!\n", ioc->name, __func__, count, int_status);
return -EFAULT;
}
/**
* _base_wait_for_doorbell_not_used - waiting for doorbell to not be in use
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @timeout: timeout in second
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*
*/
static int
_base_wait_for_doorbell_not_used(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int timeout,
int sleep_flag)
{
u32 cntdn, count;
u32 doorbell_reg;
count = 0;
cntdn = (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP) ? 1000*timeout : 2000*timeout;
do {
doorbell_reg = readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell);
if (!(doorbell_reg & MPI2_DOORBELL_USED)) {
dhsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: "
"successful count(%d), timeout(%d)\n", ioc->name,
__func__, count, timeout));
return 0;
}
if (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP)
msleep(1);
else
udelay(500);
count++;
} while (--cntdn);
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed due to timeout count(%d), "
"doorbell_reg(%x)!\n", ioc->name, __func__, count, doorbell_reg);
return -EFAULT;
}
/**
* _base_send_ioc_reset - send doorbell reset
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @reset_type: currently only supports: MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_MESSAGE_UNIT_RESET
* @timeout: timeout in second
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_send_ioc_reset(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u8 reset_type, int timeout,
int sleep_flag)
{
u32 ioc_state;
int r = 0;
if (reset_type != MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_MESSAGE_UNIT_RESET) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: unknown reset_type\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return -EFAULT;
}
if (!(ioc->facts.IOCCapabilities &
MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_EVENT_REPLAY))
return -EFAULT;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "sending message unit reset !!\n", ioc->name);
writel(reset_type << MPI2_DOORBELL_FUNCTION_SHIFT,
&ioc->chip->Doorbell);
if ((_base_wait_for_doorbell_ack(ioc, 15, sleep_flag))) {
r = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
ioc_state = _base_wait_on_iocstate(ioc, MPI2_IOC_STATE_READY,
timeout, sleep_flag);
if (ioc_state) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed going to ready state "
" (ioc_state=0x%x)\n", ioc->name, __func__, ioc_state);
r = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
out:
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "message unit reset: %s\n",
ioc->name, ((r == 0) ? "SUCCESS" : "FAILED"));
return r;
}
/**
* _base_handshake_req_reply_wait - send request thru doorbell interface
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @request_bytes: request length
* @request: pointer having request payload
* @reply_bytes: reply length
* @reply: pointer to reply payload
* @timeout: timeout in second
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_handshake_req_reply_wait(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int request_bytes,
u32 *request, int reply_bytes, u16 *reply, int timeout, int sleep_flag)
{
MPI2DefaultReply_t *default_reply = (MPI2DefaultReply_t *)reply;
int i;
u8 failed;
u16 dummy;
__le32 *mfp;
/* make sure doorbell is not in use */
if ((readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell) & MPI2_DOORBELL_USED)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "doorbell is in use "
" (line=%d)\n", ioc->name, __LINE__);
return -EFAULT;
}
/* clear pending doorbell interrupts from previous state changes */
if (readl(&ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus) &
MPI2_HIS_IOC2SYS_DB_STATUS)
writel(0, &ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus);
/* send message to ioc */
writel(((MPI2_FUNCTION_HANDSHAKE<<MPI2_DOORBELL_FUNCTION_SHIFT) |
((request_bytes/4)<<MPI2_DOORBELL_ADD_DWORDS_SHIFT)),
&ioc->chip->Doorbell);
if ((_base_wait_for_doorbell_int(ioc, 5, NO_SLEEP))) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "doorbell handshake "
"int failed (line=%d)\n", ioc->name, __LINE__);
return -EFAULT;
}
writel(0, &ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus);
if ((_base_wait_for_doorbell_ack(ioc, 5, sleep_flag))) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "doorbell handshake "
"ack failed (line=%d)\n", ioc->name, __LINE__);
return -EFAULT;
}
/* send message 32-bits at a time */
for (i = 0, failed = 0; i < request_bytes/4 && !failed; i++) {
writel(cpu_to_le32(request[i]), &ioc->chip->Doorbell);
if ((_base_wait_for_doorbell_ack(ioc, 5, sleep_flag)))
failed = 1;
}
if (failed) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "doorbell handshake "
"sending request failed (line=%d)\n", ioc->name, __LINE__);
return -EFAULT;
}
/* now wait for the reply */
if ((_base_wait_for_doorbell_int(ioc, timeout, sleep_flag))) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "doorbell handshake "
"int failed (line=%d)\n", ioc->name, __LINE__);
return -EFAULT;
}
/* read the first two 16-bits, it gives the total length of the reply */
reply[0] = le16_to_cpu(readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell)
& MPI2_DOORBELL_DATA_MASK);
writel(0, &ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus);
if ((_base_wait_for_doorbell_int(ioc, 5, sleep_flag))) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "doorbell handshake "
"int failed (line=%d)\n", ioc->name, __LINE__);
return -EFAULT;
}
reply[1] = le16_to_cpu(readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell)
& MPI2_DOORBELL_DATA_MASK);
writel(0, &ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus);
for (i = 2; i < default_reply->MsgLength * 2; i++) {
if ((_base_wait_for_doorbell_int(ioc, 5, sleep_flag))) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "doorbell "
"handshake int failed (line=%d)\n", ioc->name,
__LINE__);
return -EFAULT;
}
if (i >= reply_bytes/2) /* overflow case */
dummy = readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell);
else
reply[i] = le16_to_cpu(readl(&ioc->chip->Doorbell)
& MPI2_DOORBELL_DATA_MASK);
writel(0, &ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus);
}
_base_wait_for_doorbell_int(ioc, 5, sleep_flag);
if (_base_wait_for_doorbell_not_used(ioc, 5, sleep_flag) != 0) {
dhsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "doorbell is in use "
" (line=%d)\n", ioc->name, __LINE__));
}
writel(0, &ioc->chip->HostInterruptStatus);
if (ioc->logging_level & MPT_DEBUG_INIT) {
mfp = (__le32 *)reply;
printk(KERN_INFO "\toffset:data\n");
for (i = 0; i < reply_bytes/4; i++)
printk(KERN_INFO "\t[0x%02x]:%08x\n", i*4,
le32_to_cpu(mfp[i]));
}
return 0;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_sas_iounit_control - send sas iounit control to FW
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @mpi_reply: the reply payload from FW
* @mpi_request: the request payload sent to FW
*
* The SAS IO Unit Control Request message allows the host to perform low-level
* operations, such as resets on the PHYs of the IO Unit, also allows the host
* to obtain the IOC assigned device handles for a device if it has other
* identifying information about the device, in addition allows the host to
* remove IOC resources associated with the device.
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
int
mpt2sas_base_sas_iounit_control(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc,
Mpi2SasIoUnitControlReply_t *mpi_reply,
Mpi2SasIoUnitControlRequest_t *mpi_request)
{
u16 smid;
u32 ioc_state;
unsigned long timeleft;
u8 issue_reset;
int rc;
void *request;
u16 wait_state_count;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
mutex_lock(&ioc->base_cmds.mutex);
if (ioc->base_cmds.status != MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: base_cmd in use\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
rc = -EAGAIN;
goto out;
}
wait_state_count = 0;
ioc_state = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 1);
while (ioc_state != MPI2_IOC_STATE_OPERATIONAL) {
if (wait_state_count++ == 10) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT
"%s: failed due to ioc not operational\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
rc = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
ssleep(1);
ioc_state = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 1);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: waiting for "
"operational state(count=%d)\n", ioc->name,
__func__, wait_state_count);
}
smid = mpt2sas_base_get_smid(ioc, ioc->base_cb_idx);
if (!smid) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed obtaining a smid\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
rc = -EAGAIN;
goto out;
}
rc = 0;
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_PENDING;
request = mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame(ioc, smid);
ioc->base_cmds.smid = smid;
memcpy(request, mpi_request, sizeof(Mpi2SasIoUnitControlRequest_t));
if (mpi_request->Operation == MPI2_SAS_OP_PHY_HARD_RESET ||
mpi_request->Operation == MPI2_SAS_OP_PHY_LINK_RESET)
ioc->ioc_link_reset_in_progress = 1;
init_completion(&ioc->base_cmds.done);
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_default(ioc, smid);
timeleft = wait_for_completion_timeout(&ioc->base_cmds.done,
msecs_to_jiffies(10000));
if ((mpi_request->Operation == MPI2_SAS_OP_PHY_HARD_RESET ||
mpi_request->Operation == MPI2_SAS_OP_PHY_LINK_RESET) &&
ioc->ioc_link_reset_in_progress)
ioc->ioc_link_reset_in_progress = 0;
if (!(ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_COMPLETE)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: timeout\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
_debug_dump_mf(mpi_request,
sizeof(Mpi2SasIoUnitControlRequest_t)/4);
if (!(ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_RESET))
issue_reset = 1;
goto issue_host_reset;
}
if (ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_REPLY_VALID)
memcpy(mpi_reply, ioc->base_cmds.reply,
sizeof(Mpi2SasIoUnitControlReply_t));
else
memset(mpi_reply, 0, sizeof(Mpi2SasIoUnitControlReply_t));
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
goto out;
issue_host_reset:
if (issue_reset)
mpt2sas_base_hard_reset_handler(ioc, CAN_SLEEP,
FORCE_BIG_HAMMER);
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
rc = -EFAULT;
out:
mutex_unlock(&ioc->base_cmds.mutex);
return rc;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_scsi_enclosure_processor - sending request to sep device
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @mpi_reply: the reply payload from FW
* @mpi_request: the request payload sent to FW
*
* The SCSI Enclosure Processor request message causes the IOC to
* communicate with SES devices to control LED status signals.
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
int
mpt2sas_base_scsi_enclosure_processor(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc,
Mpi2SepReply_t *mpi_reply, Mpi2SepRequest_t *mpi_request)
{
u16 smid;
u32 ioc_state;
unsigned long timeleft;
u8 issue_reset;
int rc;
void *request;
u16 wait_state_count;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
mutex_lock(&ioc->base_cmds.mutex);
if (ioc->base_cmds.status != MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: base_cmd in use\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
rc = -EAGAIN;
goto out;
}
wait_state_count = 0;
ioc_state = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 1);
while (ioc_state != MPI2_IOC_STATE_OPERATIONAL) {
if (wait_state_count++ == 10) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT
"%s: failed due to ioc not operational\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
rc = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
ssleep(1);
ioc_state = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 1);
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: waiting for "
"operational state(count=%d)\n", ioc->name,
__func__, wait_state_count);
}
smid = mpt2sas_base_get_smid(ioc, ioc->base_cb_idx);
if (!smid) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed obtaining a smid\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
rc = -EAGAIN;
goto out;
}
rc = 0;
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_PENDING;
request = mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame(ioc, smid);
ioc->base_cmds.smid = smid;
memcpy(request, mpi_request, sizeof(Mpi2SepReply_t));
init_completion(&ioc->base_cmds.done);
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_default(ioc, smid);
timeleft = wait_for_completion_timeout(&ioc->base_cmds.done,
msecs_to_jiffies(10000));
if (!(ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_COMPLETE)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: timeout\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
_debug_dump_mf(mpi_request,
sizeof(Mpi2SepRequest_t)/4);
if (!(ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_RESET))
issue_reset = 1;
goto issue_host_reset;
}
if (ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_REPLY_VALID)
memcpy(mpi_reply, ioc->base_cmds.reply,
sizeof(Mpi2SepReply_t));
else
memset(mpi_reply, 0, sizeof(Mpi2SepReply_t));
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
goto out;
issue_host_reset:
if (issue_reset)
mpt2sas_base_hard_reset_handler(ioc, CAN_SLEEP,
FORCE_BIG_HAMMER);
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
rc = -EFAULT;
out:
mutex_unlock(&ioc->base_cmds.mutex);
return rc;
}
/**
* _base_get_port_facts - obtain port facts reply and save in ioc
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_get_port_facts(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int port, int sleep_flag)
{
Mpi2PortFactsRequest_t mpi_request;
Mpi2PortFactsReply_t mpi_reply;
struct mpt2sas_port_facts *pfacts;
int mpi_reply_sz, mpi_request_sz, r;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
mpi_reply_sz = sizeof(Mpi2PortFactsReply_t);
mpi_request_sz = sizeof(Mpi2PortFactsRequest_t);
memset(&mpi_request, 0, mpi_request_sz);
mpi_request.Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_PORT_FACTS;
mpi_request.PortNumber = port;
r = _base_handshake_req_reply_wait(ioc, mpi_request_sz,
(u32 *)&mpi_request, mpi_reply_sz, (u16 *)&mpi_reply, 5, CAN_SLEEP);
if (r != 0) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: handshake failed (r=%d)\n",
ioc->name, __func__, r);
return r;
}
pfacts = &ioc->pfacts[port];
memset(pfacts, 0, sizeof(struct mpt2sas_port_facts));
pfacts->PortNumber = mpi_reply.PortNumber;
pfacts->VP_ID = mpi_reply.VP_ID;
pfacts->VF_ID = mpi_reply.VF_ID;
pfacts->MaxPostedCmdBuffers =
le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.MaxPostedCmdBuffers);
return 0;
}
/**
* _base_get_ioc_facts - obtain ioc facts reply and save in ioc
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_get_ioc_facts(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag)
{
Mpi2IOCFactsRequest_t mpi_request;
Mpi2IOCFactsReply_t mpi_reply;
struct mpt2sas_facts *facts;
int mpi_reply_sz, mpi_request_sz, r;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
mpi_reply_sz = sizeof(Mpi2IOCFactsReply_t);
mpi_request_sz = sizeof(Mpi2IOCFactsRequest_t);
memset(&mpi_request, 0, mpi_request_sz);
mpi_request.Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_FACTS;
r = _base_handshake_req_reply_wait(ioc, mpi_request_sz,
(u32 *)&mpi_request, mpi_reply_sz, (u16 *)&mpi_reply, 5, CAN_SLEEP);
if (r != 0) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: handshake failed (r=%d)\n",
ioc->name, __func__, r);
return r;
}
facts = &ioc->facts;
memset(facts, 0, sizeof(struct mpt2sas_facts));
facts->MsgVersion = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.MsgVersion);
facts->HeaderVersion = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.HeaderVersion);
facts->VP_ID = mpi_reply.VP_ID;
facts->VF_ID = mpi_reply.VF_ID;
facts->IOCExceptions = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.IOCExceptions);
facts->MaxChainDepth = mpi_reply.MaxChainDepth;
facts->WhoInit = mpi_reply.WhoInit;
facts->NumberOfPorts = mpi_reply.NumberOfPorts;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
facts->MaxMSIxVectors = mpi_reply.MaxMSIxVectors;
facts->RequestCredit = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.RequestCredit);
facts->MaxReplyDescriptorPostQueueDepth =
le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.MaxReplyDescriptorPostQueueDepth);
facts->ProductID = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.ProductID);
facts->IOCCapabilities = le32_to_cpu(mpi_reply.IOCCapabilities);
if ((facts->IOCCapabilities & MPI2_IOCFACTS_CAPABILITY_INTEGRATED_RAID))
ioc->ir_firmware = 1;
facts->FWVersion.Word = le32_to_cpu(mpi_reply.FWVersion.Word);
facts->IOCRequestFrameSize =
le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.IOCRequestFrameSize);
facts->MaxInitiators = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.MaxInitiators);
facts->MaxTargets = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.MaxTargets);
ioc->shost->max_id = -1;
facts->MaxSasExpanders = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.MaxSasExpanders);
facts->MaxEnclosures = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.MaxEnclosures);
facts->ProtocolFlags = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.ProtocolFlags);
facts->HighPriorityCredit =
le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.HighPriorityCredit);
facts->ReplyFrameSize = mpi_reply.ReplyFrameSize;
facts->MaxDevHandle = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.MaxDevHandle);
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "hba queue depth(%d), "
"max chains per io(%d)\n", ioc->name, facts->RequestCredit,
facts->MaxChainDepth));
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "request frame size(%d), "
"reply frame size(%d)\n", ioc->name,
facts->IOCRequestFrameSize * 4, facts->ReplyFrameSize * 4));
return 0;
}
/**
* _base_send_ioc_init - send ioc_init to firmware
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_send_ioc_init(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag)
{
Mpi2IOCInitRequest_t mpi_request;
Mpi2IOCInitReply_t mpi_reply;
int r;
struct timeval current_time;
u16 ioc_status;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
memset(&mpi_request, 0, sizeof(Mpi2IOCInitRequest_t));
mpi_request.Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_INIT;
mpi_request.WhoInit = MPI2_WHOINIT_HOST_DRIVER;
mpi_request.VF_ID = 0; /* TODO */
mpi_request.VP_ID = 0;
mpi_request.MsgVersion = cpu_to_le16(MPI2_VERSION);
mpi_request.HeaderVersion = cpu_to_le16(MPI2_HEADER_VERSION);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (_base_is_controller_msix_enabled(ioc))
mpi_request.HostMSIxVectors = ioc->reply_queue_count;
mpi_request.SystemRequestFrameSize = cpu_to_le16(ioc->request_sz/4);
mpi_request.ReplyDescriptorPostQueueDepth =
cpu_to_le16(ioc->reply_post_queue_depth);
mpi_request.ReplyFreeQueueDepth =
cpu_to_le16(ioc->reply_free_queue_depth);
mpi_request.SenseBufferAddressHigh =
cpu_to_le32((u64)ioc->sense_dma >> 32);
mpi_request.SystemReplyAddressHigh =
cpu_to_le32((u64)ioc->reply_dma >> 32);
mpi_request.SystemRequestFrameBaseAddress =
cpu_to_le64((u64)ioc->request_dma);
mpi_request.ReplyFreeQueueAddress =
cpu_to_le64((u64)ioc->reply_free_dma);
mpi_request.ReplyDescriptorPostQueueAddress =
cpu_to_le64((u64)ioc->reply_post_free_dma);
/* This time stamp specifies number of milliseconds
* since epoch ~ midnight January 1, 1970.
*/
do_gettimeofday(&current_time);
mpi_request.TimeStamp = cpu_to_le64((u64)current_time.tv_sec * 1000 +
(current_time.tv_usec / 1000));
if (ioc->logging_level & MPT_DEBUG_INIT) {
__le32 *mfp;
int i;
mfp = (__le32 *)&mpi_request;
printk(KERN_INFO "\toffset:data\n");
for (i = 0; i < sizeof(Mpi2IOCInitRequest_t)/4; i++)
printk(KERN_INFO "\t[0x%02x]:%08x\n", i*4,
le32_to_cpu(mfp[i]));
}
r = _base_handshake_req_reply_wait(ioc,
sizeof(Mpi2IOCInitRequest_t), (u32 *)&mpi_request,
sizeof(Mpi2IOCInitReply_t), (u16 *)&mpi_reply, 10,
sleep_flag);
if (r != 0) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: handshake failed (r=%d)\n",
ioc->name, __func__, r);
return r;
}
ioc_status = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply.IOCStatus) & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK;
if (ioc_status != MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS ||
mpi_reply.IOCLogInfo) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed\n", ioc->name, __func__);
r = -EIO;
}
return 0;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
/**
* mpt2sas_port_enable_done - command completion routine for port enable
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @smid: system request message index
* @msix_index: MSIX table index supplied by the OS
* @reply: reply message frame(lower 32bit addr)
*
* Return 1 meaning mf should be freed from _base_interrupt
* 0 means the mf is freed from this function.
*/
u8
mpt2sas_port_enable_done(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 smid, u8 msix_index,
u32 reply)
{
MPI2DefaultReply_t *mpi_reply;
u16 ioc_status;
mpi_reply = mpt2sas_base_get_reply_virt_addr(ioc, reply);
if (mpi_reply && mpi_reply->Function == MPI2_FUNCTION_EVENT_ACK)
return 1;
if (ioc->port_enable_cmds.status == MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED)
return 1;
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status |= MPT2_CMD_COMPLETE;
if (mpi_reply) {
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status |= MPT2_CMD_REPLY_VALID;
memcpy(ioc->port_enable_cmds.reply, mpi_reply,
mpi_reply->MsgLength*4);
}
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status &= ~MPT2_CMD_PENDING;
ioc_status = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply->IOCStatus) & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK;
if (ioc_status != MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS)
ioc->port_enable_failed = 1;
if (ioc->is_driver_loading) {
if (ioc_status == MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS) {
mpt2sas_port_enable_complete(ioc);
return 1;
} else {
ioc->start_scan_failed = ioc_status;
ioc->start_scan = 0;
return 1;
}
}
complete(&ioc->port_enable_cmds.done);
return 1;
}
/**
* _base_send_port_enable - send port_enable(discovery stuff) to firmware
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_send_port_enable(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag)
{
Mpi2PortEnableRequest_t *mpi_request;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
Mpi2PortEnableReply_t *mpi_reply;
unsigned long timeleft;
int r = 0;
u16 smid;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
u16 ioc_status;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "sending port enable !!\n", ioc->name);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
if (ioc->port_enable_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_PENDING) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: internal command already in use\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return -EAGAIN;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
smid = mpt2sas_base_get_smid(ioc, ioc->port_enable_cb_idx);
if (!smid) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed obtaining a smid\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return -EAGAIN;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_PENDING;
mpi_request = mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame(ioc, smid);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
ioc->port_enable_cmds.smid = smid;
memset(mpi_request, 0, sizeof(Mpi2PortEnableRequest_t));
mpi_request->Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_PORT_ENABLE;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
init_completion(&ioc->port_enable_cmds.done);
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_default(ioc, smid);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
timeleft = wait_for_completion_timeout(&ioc->port_enable_cmds.done,
300*HZ);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
if (!(ioc->port_enable_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_COMPLETE)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: timeout\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
_debug_dump_mf(mpi_request,
sizeof(Mpi2PortEnableRequest_t)/4);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
if (ioc->port_enable_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_RESET)
r = -EFAULT;
else
r = -ETIME;
goto out;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
}
mpi_reply = ioc->port_enable_cmds.reply;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
ioc_status = le16_to_cpu(mpi_reply->IOCStatus) & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK;
if (ioc_status != MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed with (ioc_status=0x%08x)\n",
ioc->name, __func__, ioc_status);
r = -EFAULT;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
goto out;
}
out:
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "port enable: %s\n", ioc->name, ((r == 0) ?
"SUCCESS" : "FAILED"));
return r;
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
/**
* mpt2sas_port_enable - initiate firmware discovery (don't wait for reply)
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
int
mpt2sas_port_enable(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
Mpi2PortEnableRequest_t *mpi_request;
u16 smid;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "sending port enable !!\n", ioc->name);
if (ioc->port_enable_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_PENDING) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: internal command already in use\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return -EAGAIN;
}
smid = mpt2sas_base_get_smid(ioc, ioc->port_enable_cb_idx);
if (!smid) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed obtaining a smid\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return -EAGAIN;
}
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_PENDING;
mpi_request = mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame(ioc, smid);
ioc->port_enable_cmds.smid = smid;
memset(mpi_request, 0, sizeof(Mpi2PortEnableRequest_t));
mpi_request->Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_PORT_ENABLE;
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_default(ioc, smid);
return 0;
}
/**
* _base_determine_wait_on_discovery - desposition
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Decide whether to wait on discovery to complete. Used to either
* locate boot device, or report volumes ahead of physical devices.
*
* Returns 1 for wait, 0 for don't wait
*/
static int
_base_determine_wait_on_discovery(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
/* We wait for discovery to complete if IR firmware is loaded.
* The sas topology events arrive before PD events, so we need time to
* turn on the bit in ioc->pd_handles to indicate PD
* Also, it maybe required to report Volumes ahead of physical
* devices when MPI2_IOCPAGE8_IRFLAGS_LOW_VOLUME_MAPPING is set.
*/
if (ioc->ir_firmware)
return 1;
/* if no Bios, then we don't need to wait */
if (!ioc->bios_pg3.BiosVersion)
return 0;
/* Bios is present, then we drop down here.
*
* If there any entries in the Bios Page 2, then we wait
* for discovery to complete.
*/
/* Current Boot Device */
if ((ioc->bios_pg2.CurrentBootDeviceForm &
MPI2_BIOSPAGE2_FORM_MASK) ==
MPI2_BIOSPAGE2_FORM_NO_DEVICE_SPECIFIED &&
/* Request Boot Device */
(ioc->bios_pg2.ReqBootDeviceForm &
MPI2_BIOSPAGE2_FORM_MASK) ==
MPI2_BIOSPAGE2_FORM_NO_DEVICE_SPECIFIED &&
/* Alternate Request Boot Device */
(ioc->bios_pg2.ReqAltBootDeviceForm &
MPI2_BIOSPAGE2_FORM_MASK) ==
MPI2_BIOSPAGE2_FORM_NO_DEVICE_SPECIFIED)
return 0;
return 1;
}
/**
* _base_unmask_events - turn on notification for this event
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @event: firmware event
*
* The mask is stored in ioc->event_masks.
*/
static void
_base_unmask_events(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u16 event)
{
u32 desired_event;
if (event >= 128)
return;
desired_event = (1 << (event % 32));
if (event < 32)
ioc->event_masks[0] &= ~desired_event;
else if (event < 64)
ioc->event_masks[1] &= ~desired_event;
else if (event < 96)
ioc->event_masks[2] &= ~desired_event;
else if (event < 128)
ioc->event_masks[3] &= ~desired_event;
}
/**
* _base_event_notification - send event notification
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_event_notification(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag)
{
Mpi2EventNotificationRequest_t *mpi_request;
unsigned long timeleft;
u16 smid;
int r = 0;
int i;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
if (ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_PENDING) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: internal command already in use\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return -EAGAIN;
}
smid = mpt2sas_base_get_smid(ioc, ioc->base_cb_idx);
if (!smid) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed obtaining a smid\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
return -EAGAIN;
}
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_PENDING;
mpi_request = mpt2sas_base_get_msg_frame(ioc, smid);
ioc->base_cmds.smid = smid;
memset(mpi_request, 0, sizeof(Mpi2EventNotificationRequest_t));
mpi_request->Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_EVENT_NOTIFICATION;
mpi_request->VF_ID = 0; /* TODO */
mpi_request->VP_ID = 0;
for (i = 0; i < MPI2_EVENT_NOTIFY_EVENTMASK_WORDS; i++)
mpi_request->EventMasks[i] =
cpu_to_le32(ioc->event_masks[i]);
init_completion(&ioc->base_cmds.done);
mpt2sas_base_put_smid_default(ioc, smid);
timeleft = wait_for_completion_timeout(&ioc->base_cmds.done, 30*HZ);
if (!(ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_COMPLETE)) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: timeout\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
_debug_dump_mf(mpi_request,
sizeof(Mpi2EventNotificationRequest_t)/4);
if (ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_RESET)
r = -EFAULT;
else
r = -ETIME;
} else
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: complete\n",
ioc->name, __func__));
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
return r;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_validate_event_type - validating event types
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @event: firmware event
*
* This will turn on firmware event notification when application
* ask for that event. We don't mask events that are already enabled.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_validate_event_type(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, u32 *event_type)
{
int i, j;
u32 event_mask, desired_event;
u8 send_update_to_fw;
for (i = 0, send_update_to_fw = 0; i <
MPI2_EVENT_NOTIFY_EVENTMASK_WORDS; i++) {
event_mask = ~event_type[i];
desired_event = 1;
for (j = 0; j < 32; j++) {
if (!(event_mask & desired_event) &&
(ioc->event_masks[i] & desired_event)) {
ioc->event_masks[i] &= ~desired_event;
send_update_to_fw = 1;
}
desired_event = (desired_event << 1);
}
}
if (!send_update_to_fw)
return;
mutex_lock(&ioc->base_cmds.mutex);
_base_event_notification(ioc, CAN_SLEEP);
mutex_unlock(&ioc->base_cmds.mutex);
}
/**
* _base_diag_reset - the "big hammer" start of day reset
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_diag_reset(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag)
{
u32 host_diagnostic;
u32 ioc_state;
u32 count;
u32 hcb_size;
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "sending diag reset !!\n", ioc->name);
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "clear interrupts\n",
ioc->name));
count = 0;
do {
/* Write magic sequence to WriteSequence register
* Loop until in diagnostic mode
*/
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "write magic "
"sequence\n", ioc->name));
writel(MPI2_WRSEQ_FLUSH_KEY_VALUE, &ioc->chip->WriteSequence);
writel(MPI2_WRSEQ_1ST_KEY_VALUE, &ioc->chip->WriteSequence);
writel(MPI2_WRSEQ_2ND_KEY_VALUE, &ioc->chip->WriteSequence);
writel(MPI2_WRSEQ_3RD_KEY_VALUE, &ioc->chip->WriteSequence);
writel(MPI2_WRSEQ_4TH_KEY_VALUE, &ioc->chip->WriteSequence);
writel(MPI2_WRSEQ_5TH_KEY_VALUE, &ioc->chip->WriteSequence);
writel(MPI2_WRSEQ_6TH_KEY_VALUE, &ioc->chip->WriteSequence);
/* wait 100 msec */
if (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP)
msleep(100);
else
mdelay(100);
if (count++ > 20)
goto out;
host_diagnostic = readl(&ioc->chip->HostDiagnostic);
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "wrote magic "
"sequence: count(%d), host_diagnostic(0x%08x)\n",
ioc->name, count, host_diagnostic));
} while ((host_diagnostic & MPI2_DIAG_DIAG_WRITE_ENABLE) == 0);
hcb_size = readl(&ioc->chip->HCBSize);
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "diag reset: issued\n",
ioc->name));
writel(host_diagnostic | MPI2_DIAG_RESET_ADAPTER,
&ioc->chip->HostDiagnostic);
/* This delay allows the chip PCIe hardware time to finish reset tasks*/
if (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP)
msleep(MPI2_HARD_RESET_PCIE_FIRST_READ_DELAY_MICRO_SEC/1000);
else
mdelay(MPI2_HARD_RESET_PCIE_FIRST_READ_DELAY_MICRO_SEC/1000);
/* Approximately 300 second max wait */
for (count = 0; count < (300000000 /
MPI2_HARD_RESET_PCIE_SECOND_READ_DELAY_MICRO_SEC); count++) {
host_diagnostic = readl(&ioc->chip->HostDiagnostic);
if (host_diagnostic == 0xFFFFFFFF)
goto out;
if (!(host_diagnostic & MPI2_DIAG_RESET_ADAPTER))
break;
/* Wait to pass the second read delay window */
if (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP)
msleep(MPI2_HARD_RESET_PCIE_SECOND_READ_DELAY_MICRO_SEC
/1000);
else
mdelay(MPI2_HARD_RESET_PCIE_SECOND_READ_DELAY_MICRO_SEC
/1000);
}
if (host_diagnostic & MPI2_DIAG_HCB_MODE) {
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "restart the adapter "
"assuming the HCB Address points to good F/W\n",
ioc->name));
host_diagnostic &= ~MPI2_DIAG_BOOT_DEVICE_SELECT_MASK;
host_diagnostic |= MPI2_DIAG_BOOT_DEVICE_SELECT_HCDW;
writel(host_diagnostic, &ioc->chip->HostDiagnostic);
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT
"re-enable the HCDW\n", ioc->name));
writel(hcb_size | MPI2_HCB_SIZE_HCB_ENABLE,
&ioc->chip->HCBSize);
}
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "restart the adapter\n",
ioc->name));
writel(host_diagnostic & ~MPI2_DIAG_HOLD_IOC_RESET,
&ioc->chip->HostDiagnostic);
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "disable writes to the "
"diagnostic register\n", ioc->name));
writel(MPI2_WRSEQ_FLUSH_KEY_VALUE, &ioc->chip->WriteSequence);
drsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "Wait for FW to go to the "
"READY state\n", ioc->name));
ioc_state = _base_wait_on_iocstate(ioc, MPI2_IOC_STATE_READY, 20,
sleep_flag);
if (ioc_state) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: failed going to ready state "
" (ioc_state=0x%x)\n", ioc->name, __func__, ioc_state);
goto out;
}
printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "diag reset: SUCCESS\n", ioc->name);
return 0;
out:
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "diag reset: FAILED\n", ioc->name);
return -EFAULT;
}
/**
* _base_make_ioc_ready - put controller in READY state
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
* @type: FORCE_BIG_HAMMER or SOFT_RESET
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_make_ioc_ready(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag,
enum reset_type type)
{
u32 ioc_state;
int rc;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
if (ioc->pci_error_recovery)
return 0;
ioc_state = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 0);
dhsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: ioc_state(0x%08x)\n",
ioc->name, __func__, ioc_state));
if ((ioc_state & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) == MPI2_IOC_STATE_READY)
return 0;
if (ioc_state & MPI2_DOORBELL_USED) {
dhsprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "unexpected doorbell "
"active!\n", ioc->name));
goto issue_diag_reset;
}
if ((ioc_state & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) == MPI2_IOC_STATE_FAULT) {
mpt2sas_base_fault_info(ioc, ioc_state &
MPI2_DOORBELL_DATA_MASK);
goto issue_diag_reset;
}
if (type == FORCE_BIG_HAMMER)
goto issue_diag_reset;
if ((ioc_state & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) == MPI2_IOC_STATE_OPERATIONAL)
if (!(_base_send_ioc_reset(ioc,
MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_MESSAGE_UNIT_RESET, 15, CAN_SLEEP))) {
ioc->ioc_reset_count++;
return 0;
}
issue_diag_reset:
rc = _base_diag_reset(ioc, CAN_SLEEP);
ioc->ioc_reset_count++;
return rc;
}
/**
* _base_make_ioc_operational - put controller in OPERATIONAL state
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
static int
_base_make_ioc_operational(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag)
{
int r, i;
unsigned long flags;
u32 reply_address;
u16 smid;
struct _tr_list *delayed_tr, *delayed_tr_next;
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
u8 hide_flag;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
struct adapter_reply_queue *reply_q;
long reply_post_free;
u32 reply_post_free_sz;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
/* clean the delayed target reset list */
list_for_each_entry_safe(delayed_tr, delayed_tr_next,
&ioc->delayed_tr_list, list) {
list_del(&delayed_tr->list);
kfree(delayed_tr);
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Redesign Raid devices event handling using pd_handles per HBA Actual problem : Driver may receiving the top level expander removal event prior to all the individual PD removal events, hence the driver is breaking down all the PDs in advanced to the actaul PD UNHIDE event. Driver sends multiple Target Resets to the same volume handle for each individual PD removal. FIX DESCRIPTION: To fix this issue, the entire PD device handshake protocal has to be moved to interrupt context so the breakdown occurs immediately after the actual UNHIDE event arrives. The driver will only issue one Target Reset to the volume handle, occurring after the FAILED or MISSING volume status event arrives from interrupt context. For the PD UNHIDE event, the driver will issue target resets to the PD handles, followed by OP_REMOVE. The driver will set the "deteleted" flag during interrupt context. A "pd_handle" bitmask was introduced so the driver has a list of known pds during entire life of the PD; this replaces the "hidden_raid_component" flag handle in the sas_device object. Each bit in the bitmask represents a device handle. The bit in the bitmask would be toggled ON/OFF when the HIDE/UNHIDE events arrive; also this pd_handle bitmask would bould be refreshed across host resets. Here we kept older behavior of sending target reset to volume when there is a single drive pull, wait for the reply, then send target resets to the PDs. We kept this behavior so the driver will behave the same for older versions of firmware. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2010-06-17 15:16:13 +07:00
list_for_each_entry_safe(delayed_tr, delayed_tr_next,
&ioc->delayed_tr_volume_list, list) {
list_del(&delayed_tr->list);
kfree(delayed_tr);
}
/* initialize the scsi lookup free list */
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ioc->free_list);
smid = 1;
for (i = 0; i < ioc->scsiio_depth; i++, smid++) {
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ioc->scsi_lookup[i].chain_list);
ioc->scsi_lookup[i].cb_idx = 0xFF;
ioc->scsi_lookup[i].smid = smid;
ioc->scsi_lookup[i].scmd = NULL;
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
ioc->scsi_lookup[i].direct_io = 0;
list_add_tail(&ioc->scsi_lookup[i].tracker_list,
&ioc->free_list);
}
/* hi-priority queue */
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ioc->hpr_free_list);
smid = ioc->hi_priority_smid;
for (i = 0; i < ioc->hi_priority_depth; i++, smid++) {
ioc->hpr_lookup[i].cb_idx = 0xFF;
ioc->hpr_lookup[i].smid = smid;
list_add_tail(&ioc->hpr_lookup[i].tracker_list,
&ioc->hpr_free_list);
}
/* internal queue */
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ioc->internal_free_list);
smid = ioc->internal_smid;
for (i = 0; i < ioc->internal_depth; i++, smid++) {
ioc->internal_lookup[i].cb_idx = 0xFF;
ioc->internal_lookup[i].smid = smid;
list_add_tail(&ioc->internal_lookup[i].tracker_list,
&ioc->internal_free_list);
}
/* chain pool */
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ioc->free_chain_list);
for (i = 0; i < ioc->chain_depth; i++)
list_add_tail(&ioc->chain_lookup[i].tracker_list,
&ioc->free_chain_list);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
/* initialize Reply Free Queue */
for (i = 0, reply_address = (u32)ioc->reply_dma ;
i < ioc->reply_free_queue_depth ; i++, reply_address +=
ioc->reply_sz)
ioc->reply_free[i] = cpu_to_le32(reply_address);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
/* initialize reply queues */
if (ioc->is_driver_loading)
_base_assign_reply_queues(ioc);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
/* initialize Reply Post Free Queue */
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
reply_post_free = (long)ioc->reply_post_free;
reply_post_free_sz = ioc->reply_post_queue_depth *
sizeof(Mpi2DefaultReplyDescriptor_t);
list_for_each_entry(reply_q, &ioc->reply_queue_list, list) {
reply_q->reply_post_host_index = 0;
reply_q->reply_post_free = (Mpi2ReplyDescriptorsUnion_t *)
reply_post_free;
for (i = 0; i < ioc->reply_post_queue_depth; i++)
reply_q->reply_post_free[i].Words =
cpu_to_le64(ULLONG_MAX);
if (!_base_is_controller_msix_enabled(ioc))
goto skip_init_reply_post_free_queue;
reply_post_free += reply_post_free_sz;
}
skip_init_reply_post_free_queue:
r = _base_send_ioc_init(ioc, sleep_flag);
if (r)
return r;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
/* initialize reply free host index */
ioc->reply_free_host_index = ioc->reply_free_queue_depth - 1;
writel(ioc->reply_free_host_index, &ioc->chip->ReplyFreeHostIndex);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
/* initialize reply post host index */
list_for_each_entry(reply_q, &ioc->reply_queue_list, list) {
writel(reply_q->msix_index << MPI2_RPHI_MSIX_INDEX_SHIFT,
&ioc->chip->ReplyPostHostIndex);
if (!_base_is_controller_msix_enabled(ioc))
goto skip_init_reply_post_host_index;
}
skip_init_reply_post_host_index:
_base_unmask_interrupts(ioc);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
r = _base_event_notification(ioc, sleep_flag);
if (r)
return r;
if (sleep_flag == CAN_SLEEP)
_base_static_config_pages(ioc);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
if (ioc->is_driver_loading) {
if (ioc->is_warpdrive && ioc->manu_pg10.OEMIdentifier
== 0x80) {
hide_flag = (u8) (
le32_to_cpu(ioc->manu_pg10.OEMSpecificFlags0) &
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
MFG_PAGE10_HIDE_SSDS_MASK);
if (hide_flag != MFG_PAGE10_HIDE_SSDS_MASK)
ioc->mfg_pg10_hide_flag = hide_flag;
}
ioc->wait_for_discovery_to_complete =
_base_determine_wait_on_discovery(ioc);
return r; /* scan_start and scan_finished support */
[SCSI] mpt2sas : WarpDrive New product SSS6200 support added This patch has Support for the new solid state device product SSS6200 from LSI and relavent features w.r.t SSS6200. The major feature added in this driver is supporting Direct-I/O to the SSS6200 storage.There are some additional changes done to avoid exposing the RAID member disks to the OS and hiding/exposing drives based on the OEM Specific Flag in Manufacturing Page10 (this is required to handle specific changes in the SSS6200 firmware). Each and every changes are listed below. 1. Hiding IR related messages. For SSS6200, the driver is modified not to print IR related events. Even if the debugging is enabled the IR related messages will not be displayed. In some places if there is a need to display a message related to IR the string "IR" is replaced with string "DD" and the string "volume" is replaced with "direct drive". But the function names are not changed hence there are some places where the reference to volume can be seen if debug level is set. 2. Removed RAID transport support In Linux the user can retrieve RAID volume information from the sysfs directory. This support is removed for SSS6200. 3. Direct I/O support. The driver tries to enable direct I/O when a volume is reported to the driver by the firmware through IRCC events and the driver does this just before reporting to the OS, hence all the OS issued I/O can go through direct path if they can, The first validation is to see whether the manufacturing page10 flag is set to expose all drives always. If that is set, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message "DDIO" is disabled globally as drives are exposed. The driver checks whether there is more than one volume in the controller, if so the direct I/O will be disabled globally for all volumes in the controller and the message displayed will be "DDIO is disabled globally as number of drives > 1. If retrieving number of PD is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in computing number of drives DDIO disabled. If memory allocation for RAIDVolumePage0 is failed, the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Memory allocation failure for RVPG0 DDIO disabled. If retrieving RAIDVolumePage0 is failed the driver will not enable direct I/O and displays the message Failure in retrieving RVPG0 DDIO disabled If the number of PD in a volume is greater than 8, then the direct I/O will be disabled. If any of individual drives handle retrieval is failed then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume is not RAID0 or if the block size is not 512 then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the volume size is greater than 2TB then the DD-IO will be disabled. If the driver is not able to find a valid stripe exponent using the configured stripe size then the DD-IO will be disabled When the DD-IO is enabled the driver will check every I/O request issued to the storage and checks whether the request is either READ6/WRITE6/READ10/WRITE10, if it is and if the complete I/O transfer is within a stripe size then the I/O is redirected to the drive directly instead of the volume. On completion of every I/O, if the completion is failure means if the reply is address reply with a reply frame associated with it, then the type of I/O will be checked, if the I/O is direct then the I/O will be retried to the volume once. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Moore <eric.moore@lsi.com> Reviewed-by: Sathya Prakash <sathya.prakash@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2011-04-07 14:02:49 +07:00
}
r = _base_send_port_enable(ioc, sleep_flag);
if (r)
return r;
return r;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_free_resources - free resources controller resources (io/irq/memap)
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_free_resources(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = ioc->pdev;
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
_base_mask_interrupts(ioc);
ioc->shost_recovery = 1;
_base_make_ioc_ready(ioc, CAN_SLEEP, SOFT_RESET);
ioc->shost_recovery = 0;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
_base_free_irq(ioc);
_base_disable_msix(ioc);
if (ioc->chip_phys)
iounmap(ioc->chip);
ioc->chip_phys = 0;
pci_release_selected_regions(ioc->pdev, ioc->bars);
pci_disable_pcie_error_reporting(pdev);
pci_disable_device(pdev);
return;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_attach - attach controller instance
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
int
mpt2sas_base_attach(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
int r, i;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
int cpu_id, last_cpu_id = 0;
dinitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
/* setup cpu_msix_table */
ioc->cpu_count = num_online_cpus();
for_each_online_cpu(cpu_id)
last_cpu_id = cpu_id;
ioc->cpu_msix_table_sz = last_cpu_id + 1;
ioc->cpu_msix_table = kzalloc(ioc->cpu_msix_table_sz, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->reply_queue_count = 1;
if (!ioc->cpu_msix_table) {
dfailprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "allocation for "
"cpu_msix_table failed!!!\n", ioc->name));
r = -ENOMEM;
goto out_free_resources;
}
if (ioc->is_warpdrive) {
ioc->reply_post_host_index = kcalloc(ioc->cpu_msix_table_sz,
sizeof(resource_size_t *), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ioc->reply_post_host_index) {
dfailprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "allocation "
"for cpu_msix_table failed!!!\n", ioc->name));
r = -ENOMEM;
goto out_free_resources;
}
}
r = mpt2sas_base_map_resources(ioc);
if (r)
goto out_free_resources;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
if (ioc->is_warpdrive) {
ioc->reply_post_host_index[0] =
(resource_size_t *)&ioc->chip->ReplyPostHostIndex;
for (i = 1; i < ioc->cpu_msix_table_sz; i++)
ioc->reply_post_host_index[i] = (resource_size_t *)
((u8 *)&ioc->chip->Doorbell + (0x4000 + ((i - 1)
* 4)));
}
pci_set_drvdata(ioc->pdev, ioc->shost);
r = _base_get_ioc_facts(ioc, CAN_SLEEP);
if (r)
goto out_free_resources;
r = _base_make_ioc_ready(ioc, CAN_SLEEP, SOFT_RESET);
if (r)
goto out_free_resources;
ioc->pfacts = kcalloc(ioc->facts.NumberOfPorts,
sizeof(struct mpt2sas_port_facts), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ioc->pfacts) {
r = -ENOMEM;
goto out_free_resources;
}
for (i = 0 ; i < ioc->facts.NumberOfPorts; i++) {
r = _base_get_port_facts(ioc, i, CAN_SLEEP);
if (r)
goto out_free_resources;
}
r = _base_allocate_memory_pools(ioc, CAN_SLEEP);
if (r)
goto out_free_resources;
init_waitqueue_head(&ioc->reset_wq);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Redesign Raid devices event handling using pd_handles per HBA Actual problem : Driver may receiving the top level expander removal event prior to all the individual PD removal events, hence the driver is breaking down all the PDs in advanced to the actaul PD UNHIDE event. Driver sends multiple Target Resets to the same volume handle for each individual PD removal. FIX DESCRIPTION: To fix this issue, the entire PD device handshake protocal has to be moved to interrupt context so the breakdown occurs immediately after the actual UNHIDE event arrives. The driver will only issue one Target Reset to the volume handle, occurring after the FAILED or MISSING volume status event arrives from interrupt context. For the PD UNHIDE event, the driver will issue target resets to the PD handles, followed by OP_REMOVE. The driver will set the "deteleted" flag during interrupt context. A "pd_handle" bitmask was introduced so the driver has a list of known pds during entire life of the PD; this replaces the "hidden_raid_component" flag handle in the sas_device object. Each bit in the bitmask represents a device handle. The bit in the bitmask would be toggled ON/OFF when the HIDE/UNHIDE events arrive; also this pd_handle bitmask would bould be refreshed across host resets. Here we kept older behavior of sending target reset to volume when there is a single drive pull, wait for the reply, then send target resets to the PDs. We kept this behavior so the driver will behave the same for older versions of firmware. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2010-06-17 15:16:13 +07:00
/* allocate memory pd handle bitmask list */
ioc->pd_handles_sz = (ioc->facts.MaxDevHandle / 8);
if (ioc->facts.MaxDevHandle % 8)
ioc->pd_handles_sz++;
ioc->pd_handles = kzalloc(ioc->pd_handles_sz,
GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ioc->pd_handles) {
r = -ENOMEM;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Redesign Raid devices event handling using pd_handles per HBA Actual problem : Driver may receiving the top level expander removal event prior to all the individual PD removal events, hence the driver is breaking down all the PDs in advanced to the actaul PD UNHIDE event. Driver sends multiple Target Resets to the same volume handle for each individual PD removal. FIX DESCRIPTION: To fix this issue, the entire PD device handshake protocal has to be moved to interrupt context so the breakdown occurs immediately after the actual UNHIDE event arrives. The driver will only issue one Target Reset to the volume handle, occurring after the FAILED or MISSING volume status event arrives from interrupt context. For the PD UNHIDE event, the driver will issue target resets to the PD handles, followed by OP_REMOVE. The driver will set the "deteleted" flag during interrupt context. A "pd_handle" bitmask was introduced so the driver has a list of known pds during entire life of the PD; this replaces the "hidden_raid_component" flag handle in the sas_device object. Each bit in the bitmask represents a device handle. The bit in the bitmask would be toggled ON/OFF when the HIDE/UNHIDE events arrive; also this pd_handle bitmask would bould be refreshed across host resets. Here we kept older behavior of sending target reset to volume when there is a single drive pull, wait for the reply, then send target resets to the PDs. We kept this behavior so the driver will behave the same for older versions of firmware. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2010-06-17 15:16:13 +07:00
goto out_free_resources;
}
ioc->blocking_handles = kzalloc(ioc->pd_handles_sz,
GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ioc->blocking_handles) {
r = -ENOMEM;
goto out_free_resources;
}
ioc->fwfault_debug = mpt2sas_fwfault_debug;
/* base internal command bits */
mutex_init(&ioc->base_cmds.mutex);
ioc->base_cmds.reply = kzalloc(ioc->reply_sz, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->base_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
/* port_enable command bits */
ioc->port_enable_cmds.reply = kzalloc(ioc->reply_sz, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
/* transport internal command bits */
ioc->transport_cmds.reply = kzalloc(ioc->reply_sz, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->transport_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
mutex_init(&ioc->transport_cmds.mutex);
/* scsih internal command bits */
ioc->scsih_cmds.reply = kzalloc(ioc->reply_sz, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->scsih_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
mutex_init(&ioc->scsih_cmds.mutex);
/* task management internal command bits */
ioc->tm_cmds.reply = kzalloc(ioc->reply_sz, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->tm_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
mutex_init(&ioc->tm_cmds.mutex);
/* config page internal command bits */
ioc->config_cmds.reply = kzalloc(ioc->reply_sz, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->config_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
mutex_init(&ioc->config_cmds.mutex);
/* ctl module internal command bits */
ioc->ctl_cmds.reply = kzalloc(ioc->reply_sz, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->ctl_cmds.sense = kzalloc(SCSI_SENSE_BUFFERSIZE, GFP_KERNEL);
ioc->ctl_cmds.status = MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
mutex_init(&ioc->ctl_cmds.mutex);
if (!ioc->base_cmds.reply || !ioc->transport_cmds.reply ||
!ioc->scsih_cmds.reply || !ioc->tm_cmds.reply ||
!ioc->config_cmds.reply || !ioc->ctl_cmds.reply ||
!ioc->ctl_cmds.sense) {
r = -ENOMEM;
goto out_free_resources;
}
if (!ioc->base_cmds.reply || !ioc->transport_cmds.reply ||
!ioc->scsih_cmds.reply || !ioc->tm_cmds.reply ||
!ioc->config_cmds.reply || !ioc->ctl_cmds.reply) {
r = -ENOMEM;
goto out_free_resources;
}
for (i = 0; i < MPI2_EVENT_NOTIFY_EVENTMASK_WORDS; i++)
ioc->event_masks[i] = -1;
/* here we enable the events we care about */
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_SAS_DISCOVERY);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_SAS_BROADCAST_PRIMITIVE);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_SAS_TOPOLOGY_CHANGE_LIST);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_SAS_DEVICE_STATUS_CHANGE);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_SAS_ENCL_DEVICE_STATUS_CHANGE);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_IR_CONFIGURATION_CHANGE_LIST);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_IR_VOLUME);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_IR_PHYSICAL_DISK);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_IR_OPERATION_STATUS);
_base_unmask_events(ioc, MPI2_EVENT_LOG_ENTRY_ADDED);
r = _base_make_ioc_operational(ioc, CAN_SLEEP);
if (r)
goto out_free_resources;
ioc->non_operational_loop = 0;
return 0;
out_free_resources:
ioc->remove_host = 1;
mpt2sas_base_free_resources(ioc);
_base_release_memory_pools(ioc);
pci_set_drvdata(ioc->pdev, NULL);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
kfree(ioc->cpu_msix_table);
if (ioc->is_warpdrive)
kfree(ioc->reply_post_host_index);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Redesign Raid devices event handling using pd_handles per HBA Actual problem : Driver may receiving the top level expander removal event prior to all the individual PD removal events, hence the driver is breaking down all the PDs in advanced to the actaul PD UNHIDE event. Driver sends multiple Target Resets to the same volume handle for each individual PD removal. FIX DESCRIPTION: To fix this issue, the entire PD device handshake protocal has to be moved to interrupt context so the breakdown occurs immediately after the actual UNHIDE event arrives. The driver will only issue one Target Reset to the volume handle, occurring after the FAILED or MISSING volume status event arrives from interrupt context. For the PD UNHIDE event, the driver will issue target resets to the PD handles, followed by OP_REMOVE. The driver will set the "deteleted" flag during interrupt context. A "pd_handle" bitmask was introduced so the driver has a list of known pds during entire life of the PD; this replaces the "hidden_raid_component" flag handle in the sas_device object. Each bit in the bitmask represents a device handle. The bit in the bitmask would be toggled ON/OFF when the HIDE/UNHIDE events arrive; also this pd_handle bitmask would bould be refreshed across host resets. Here we kept older behavior of sending target reset to volume when there is a single drive pull, wait for the reply, then send target resets to the PDs. We kept this behavior so the driver will behave the same for older versions of firmware. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2010-06-17 15:16:13 +07:00
kfree(ioc->pd_handles);
kfree(ioc->blocking_handles);
kfree(ioc->tm_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->transport_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->scsih_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->config_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->base_cmds.reply);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
kfree(ioc->port_enable_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->ctl_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->ctl_cmds.sense);
kfree(ioc->pfacts);
ioc->ctl_cmds.reply = NULL;
ioc->base_cmds.reply = NULL;
ioc->tm_cmds.reply = NULL;
ioc->scsih_cmds.reply = NULL;
ioc->transport_cmds.reply = NULL;
ioc->config_cmds.reply = NULL;
ioc->pfacts = NULL;
return r;
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_detach - remove controller instance
* @ioc: per adapter object
*
* Return nothing.
*/
void
mpt2sas_base_detach(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc)
{
dexitprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
mpt2sas_base_stop_watchdog(ioc);
mpt2sas_base_free_resources(ioc);
_base_release_memory_pools(ioc);
pci_set_drvdata(ioc->pdev, NULL);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Added NUNA IO support in driver which uses multi-reply queue support of the HBA Support added for controllers capable of multi reply queues. The following are the modifications to the driver to support NUMA. 1) Create the new structure adapter_reply_queue to contain the reply queue info for every msix vector. This object will contain a reply_post_host_index, reply_post_free for each instance, msix_index, among other parameters. We will track all the reply queues on a link list called ioc->reply_queue_list. Each reply queue is aligned with each IRQ, and is passed to the interrupt via the bus_id parameter. (2) The driver will figure out the msix_vector_count from the PCIe MSIX capabilities register instead of the IOC Facts->MaxMSIxVectors. This is because the firmware is not filling in this field until the driver has already registered MSIX support. (3) If the ioc_facts reports that the controller is MSIX compatible in the capabilities, then the driver will request for multiple irqs. This count is calculated based on the minimum between the online cpus available and the ioc->msix_vector_count. This count is reported to firmware in the ioc_init request. (4) New routines were added _base_free_irq and _base_request_irq, so registering and freeing msix vectors were done thru simple function API. (5) The new routine _base_assign_reply_queues was added to align the msix indexes across cpus. This will initialize the array called ioc->cpu_msix_table. This array is looked up on every MPI request so the MSIxIndex is set appropriately. (6) A new shost sysfs attribute was added to report the reply_queue_count. (7) User needs to set the affinity cpu mask, so the interrupts occur on the same cpu that sent the original request. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-08 07:48:50 +07:00
kfree(ioc->cpu_msix_table);
if (ioc->is_warpdrive)
kfree(ioc->reply_post_host_index);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: Redesign Raid devices event handling using pd_handles per HBA Actual problem : Driver may receiving the top level expander removal event prior to all the individual PD removal events, hence the driver is breaking down all the PDs in advanced to the actaul PD UNHIDE event. Driver sends multiple Target Resets to the same volume handle for each individual PD removal. FIX DESCRIPTION: To fix this issue, the entire PD device handshake protocal has to be moved to interrupt context so the breakdown occurs immediately after the actual UNHIDE event arrives. The driver will only issue one Target Reset to the volume handle, occurring after the FAILED or MISSING volume status event arrives from interrupt context. For the PD UNHIDE event, the driver will issue target resets to the PD handles, followed by OP_REMOVE. The driver will set the "deteleted" flag during interrupt context. A "pd_handle" bitmask was introduced so the driver has a list of known pds during entire life of the PD; this replaces the "hidden_raid_component" flag handle in the sas_device object. Each bit in the bitmask represents a device handle. The bit in the bitmask would be toggled ON/OFF when the HIDE/UNHIDE events arrive; also this pd_handle bitmask would bould be refreshed across host resets. Here we kept older behavior of sending target reset to volume when there is a single drive pull, wait for the reply, then send target resets to the PDs. We kept this behavior so the driver will behave the same for older versions of firmware. Signed-off-by: Kashyap Desai <kashyap.desai@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@suse.de>
2010-06-17 15:16:13 +07:00
kfree(ioc->pd_handles);
kfree(ioc->blocking_handles);
kfree(ioc->pfacts);
kfree(ioc->ctl_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->ctl_cmds.sense);
kfree(ioc->base_cmds.reply);
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
kfree(ioc->port_enable_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->tm_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->transport_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->scsih_cmds.reply);
kfree(ioc->config_cmds.reply);
}
/**
* _base_reset_handler - reset callback handler (for base)
* @ioc: per adapter object
* @reset_phase: phase
*
* The handler for doing any required cleanup or initialization.
*
* The reset phase can be MPT2_IOC_PRE_RESET, MPT2_IOC_AFTER_RESET,
* MPT2_IOC_DONE_RESET
*
* Return nothing.
*/
static void
_base_reset_handler(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int reset_phase)
{
mpt2sas_scsih_reset_handler(ioc, reset_phase);
mpt2sas_ctl_reset_handler(ioc, reset_phase);
switch (reset_phase) {
case MPT2_IOC_PRE_RESET:
dtmprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: "
"MPT2_IOC_PRE_RESET\n", ioc->name, __func__));
break;
case MPT2_IOC_AFTER_RESET:
dtmprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: "
"MPT2_IOC_AFTER_RESET\n", ioc->name, __func__));
if (ioc->transport_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_PENDING) {
ioc->transport_cmds.status |= MPT2_CMD_RESET;
mpt2sas_base_free_smid(ioc, ioc->transport_cmds.smid);
complete(&ioc->transport_cmds.done);
}
if (ioc->base_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_PENDING) {
ioc->base_cmds.status |= MPT2_CMD_RESET;
mpt2sas_base_free_smid(ioc, ioc->base_cmds.smid);
complete(&ioc->base_cmds.done);
}
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
if (ioc->port_enable_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_PENDING) {
ioc->port_enable_failed = 1;
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status |= MPT2_CMD_RESET;
mpt2sas_base_free_smid(ioc, ioc->port_enable_cmds.smid);
if (ioc->is_driver_loading) {
ioc->start_scan_failed =
MPI2_IOCSTATUS_INTERNAL_ERROR;
ioc->start_scan = 0;
ioc->port_enable_cmds.status =
MPT2_CMD_NOT_USED;
} else
complete(&ioc->port_enable_cmds.done);
}
if (ioc->config_cmds.status & MPT2_CMD_PENDING) {
ioc->config_cmds.status |= MPT2_CMD_RESET;
mpt2sas_base_free_smid(ioc, ioc->config_cmds.smid);
ioc->config_cmds.smid = USHRT_MAX;
complete(&ioc->config_cmds.done);
}
break;
case MPT2_IOC_DONE_RESET:
dtmprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: "
"MPT2_IOC_DONE_RESET\n", ioc->name, __func__));
break;
}
}
/**
* _wait_for_commands_to_complete - reset controller
* @ioc: Pointer to MPT_ADAPTER structure
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
*
* This function waiting(3s) for all pending commands to complete
* prior to putting controller in reset.
*/
static void
_wait_for_commands_to_complete(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag)
{
u32 ioc_state;
unsigned long flags;
u16 i;
ioc->pending_io_count = 0;
if (sleep_flag != CAN_SLEEP)
return;
ioc_state = mpt2sas_base_get_iocstate(ioc, 0);
if ((ioc_state & MPI2_IOC_STATE_MASK) != MPI2_IOC_STATE_OPERATIONAL)
return;
/* pending command count */
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
for (i = 0; i < ioc->scsiio_depth; i++)
if (ioc->scsi_lookup[i].cb_idx != 0xFF)
ioc->pending_io_count++;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->scsi_lookup_lock, flags);
if (!ioc->pending_io_count)
return;
/* wait for pending commands to complete */
wait_event_timeout(ioc->reset_wq, ioc->pending_io_count == 0, 10 * HZ);
}
/**
* mpt2sas_base_hard_reset_handler - reset controller
* @ioc: Pointer to MPT_ADAPTER structure
* @sleep_flag: CAN_SLEEP or NO_SLEEP
* @type: FORCE_BIG_HAMMER or SOFT_RESET
*
* Returns 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
*/
int
mpt2sas_base_hard_reset_handler(struct MPT2SAS_ADAPTER *ioc, int sleep_flag,
enum reset_type type)
{
int r;
unsigned long flags;
dtmprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: enter\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
if (ioc->pci_error_recovery) {
printk(MPT2SAS_ERR_FMT "%s: pci error recovery reset\n",
ioc->name, __func__);
r = 0;
goto out_unlocked;
}
if (mpt2sas_fwfault_debug)
mpt2sas_halt_firmware(ioc);
/* TODO - What we really should be doing is pulling
* out all the code associated with NO_SLEEP; its never used.
* That is legacy code from mpt fusion driver, ported over.
* I will leave this BUG_ON here for now till its been resolved.
*/
BUG_ON(sleep_flag == NO_SLEEP);
/* wait for an active reset in progress to complete */
if (!mutex_trylock(&ioc->reset_in_progress_mutex)) {
do {
ssleep(1);
} while (ioc->shost_recovery == 1);
dtmprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: exit\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
return ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_status;
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
ioc->shost_recovery = 1;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
_base_reset_handler(ioc, MPT2_IOC_PRE_RESET);
_wait_for_commands_to_complete(ioc, sleep_flag);
_base_mask_interrupts(ioc);
r = _base_make_ioc_ready(ioc, sleep_flag, type);
if (r)
goto out;
_base_reset_handler(ioc, MPT2_IOC_AFTER_RESET);
/* If this hard reset is called while port enable is active, then
* there is no reason to call make_ioc_operational
*/
[SCSI] mpt2sas: New feature - Fast Load Support New feature Fast Load Support. (1)Asynchronous SCSI scanning: This will allow the drivers to scan for devices in parallel while other device drivers are loading at the same time. This will improve the amount of time it takes for the OS to load. (2) Reporting Devices while port enable is active: This feature will allow devices to be reported to OS immediately while port enable is active. The previous implementation waits for port enable to complete, and then report devices. This feature is only enabled on IT firmware configurations when there are no boot device configured in BIOS Configuration Utility, else the driver will wait till port enable completes reporting devices. For IR firmware, this feature is turned off. This feature is to address large SAS topologies (>100 drives) when the boot OS is using onboard SATA device, in other words, the boot devices is not connected to our controller. (3) Scanning for devices after diagnostic reset completes: A new routine _scsih_scan_start is added. This will scan the expander pages, IR pages, and sas device pages, then reporting new devices to SCSI Mid layer. It seems the driver is not supporting adding devices while diagnostic reset is active. Apparently this is due to the sanity checks on ioc->shost_recovery flag throughout the context of kernel work thread FIFO, and the mpt2sas_fw_work. Signed-off-by: Nagalakshmi Nandigama <nagalakshmi.nandigama@lsi.com> Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-10-19 17:06:26 +07:00
if (ioc->is_driver_loading && ioc->port_enable_failed) {
ioc->remove_host = 1;
r = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
r = _base_make_ioc_operational(ioc, sleep_flag);
if (!r)
_base_reset_handler(ioc, MPT2_IOC_DONE_RESET);
out:
dtmprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: %s\n",
ioc->name, __func__, ((r == 0) ? "SUCCESS" : "FAILED")));
spin_lock_irqsave(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_status = r;
ioc->shost_recovery = 0;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ioc->ioc_reset_in_progress_lock, flags);
mutex_unlock(&ioc->reset_in_progress_mutex);
out_unlocked:
dtmprintk(ioc, printk(MPT2SAS_INFO_FMT "%s: exit\n", ioc->name,
__func__));
return r;
}