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- SAS Layer
- ---------
- The SAS Layer is a management infrastructure which manages
- SAS LLDDs. It sits between SCSI Core and SAS LLDDs. The
- layout is as follows: while SCSI Core is concerned with
- SAM/SPC issues, and a SAS LLDD+sequencer is concerned with
- phy/OOB/link management, the SAS layer is concerned with:
- * SAS Phy/Port/HA event management (LLDD generates,
- SAS Layer processes),
- * SAS Port management (creation/destruction),
- * SAS Domain discovery and revalidation,
- * SAS Domain device management,
- * SCSI Host registration/unregistration,
- * Device registration with SCSI Core (SAS) or libata
- (SATA), and
- * Expander management and exporting expander control
- to user space.
- A SAS LLDD is a PCI device driver. It is concerned with
- phy/OOB management, and vendor specific tasks and generates
- events to the SAS layer.
- The SAS Layer does most SAS tasks as outlined in the SAS 1.1
- spec.
- The sas_ha_struct describes the SAS LLDD to the SAS layer.
- Most of it is used by the SAS Layer but a few fields need to
- be initialized by the LLDDs.
- After initializing your hardware, from the probe() function
- you call sas_register_ha(). It will register your LLDD with
- the SCSI subsystem, creating a SCSI host and it will
- register your SAS driver with the sysfs SAS tree it creates.
- It will then return. Then you enable your phys to actually
- start OOB (at which point your driver will start calling the
- notify_* event callbacks).
- Structure descriptions:
- struct sas_phy --------------------
- Normally this is statically embedded to your driver's
- phy structure:
- struct my_phy {
- blah;
- struct sas_phy sas_phy;
- bleh;
- };
- And then all the phys are an array of my_phy in your HA
- struct (shown below).
- Then as you go along and initialize your phys you also
- initialize the sas_phy struct, along with your own
- phy structure.
- In general, the phys are managed by the LLDD and the ports
- are managed by the SAS layer. So the phys are initialized
- and updated by the LLDD and the ports are initialized and
- updated by the SAS layer.
- There is a scheme where the LLDD can RW certain fields,
- and the SAS layer can only read such ones, and vice versa.
- The idea is to avoid unnecessary locking.
- enabled -- must be set (0/1)
- id -- must be set [0,MAX_PHYS)
- class, proto, type, role, oob_mode, linkrate -- must be set
- oob_mode -- you set this when OOB has finished and then notify
- the SAS Layer.
- sas_addr -- this normally points to an array holding the sas
- address of the phy, possibly somewhere in your my_phy
- struct.
- attached_sas_addr -- set this when you (LLDD) receive an
- IDENTIFY frame or a FIS frame, _before_ notifying the SAS
- layer. The idea is that sometimes the LLDD may want to fake
- or provide a different SAS address on that phy/port and this
- allows it to do this. At best you should copy the sas
- address from the IDENTIFY frame or maybe generate a SAS
- address for SATA directly attached devices. The Discover
- process may later change this.
- frame_rcvd -- this is where you copy the IDENTIFY/FIS frame
- when you get it; you lock, copy, set frame_rcvd_size and
- unlock the lock, and then call the event. It is a pointer
- since there's no way to know your hw frame size _exactly_,
- so you define the actual array in your phy struct and let
- this pointer point to it. You copy the frame from your
- DMAable memory to that area holding the lock.
- sas_prim -- this is where primitives go when they're
- received. See sas.h. Grab the lock, set the primitive,
- release the lock, notify.
- port -- this points to the sas_port if the phy belongs
- to a port -- the LLDD only reads this. It points to the
- sas_port this phy is part of. Set by the SAS Layer.
- ha -- may be set; the SAS layer sets it anyway.
- lldd_phy -- you should set this to point to your phy so you
- can find your way around faster when the SAS layer calls one
- of your callbacks and passes you a phy. If the sas_phy is
- embedded you can also use container_of -- whatever you
- prefer.
- struct sas_port --------------------
- The LLDD doesn't set any fields of this struct -- it only
- reads them. They should be self explanatory.
- phy_mask is 32 bit, this should be enough for now, as I
- haven't heard of a HA having more than 8 phys.
- lldd_port -- I haven't found use for that -- maybe other
- LLDD who wish to have internal port representation can make
- use of this.
- struct sas_ha_struct --------------------
- It normally is statically declared in your own LLDD
- structure describing your adapter:
- struct my_sas_ha {
- blah;
- struct sas_ha_struct sas_ha;
- struct my_phy phys[MAX_PHYS];
- struct sas_port sas_ports[MAX_PHYS]; /* (1) */
- bleh;
- };
- (1) If your LLDD doesn't have its own port representation.
- What needs to be initialized (sample function given below).
- pcidev
- sas_addr -- since the SAS layer doesn't want to mess with
- memory allocation, etc, this points to statically
- allocated array somewhere (say in your host adapter
- structure) and holds the SAS address of the host
- adapter as given by you or the manufacturer, etc.
- sas_port
- sas_phy -- an array of pointers to structures. (see
- note above on sas_addr).
- These must be set. See more notes below.
- num_phys -- the number of phys present in the sas_phy array,
- and the number of ports present in the sas_port
- array. There can be a maximum num_phys ports (one per
- port) so we drop the num_ports, and only use
- num_phys.
- The event interface:
- /* LLDD calls these to notify the class of an event. */
- void (*notify_ha_event)(struct sas_ha_struct *, enum ha_event);
- void (*notify_port_event)(struct sas_phy *, enum port_event);
- void (*notify_phy_event)(struct sas_phy *, enum phy_event);
- When sas_register_ha() returns, those are set and can be
- called by the LLDD to notify the SAS layer of such events
- the SAS layer.
- The port notification:
- /* The class calls these to notify the LLDD of an event. */
- void (*lldd_port_formed)(struct sas_phy *);
- void (*lldd_port_deformed)(struct sas_phy *);
- If the LLDD wants notification when a port has been formed
- or deformed it sets those to a function satisfying the type.
- A SAS LLDD should also implement at least one of the Task
- Management Functions (TMFs) described in SAM:
- /* Task Management Functions. Must be called from process context. */
- int (*lldd_abort_task)(struct sas_task *);
- int (*lldd_abort_task_set)(struct domain_device *, u8 *lun);
- int (*lldd_clear_aca)(struct domain_device *, u8 *lun);
- int (*lldd_clear_task_set)(struct domain_device *, u8 *lun);
- int (*lldd_I_T_nexus_reset)(struct domain_device *);
- int (*lldd_lu_reset)(struct domain_device *, u8 *lun);
- int (*lldd_query_task)(struct sas_task *);
- For more information please read SAM from T10.org.
- Port and Adapter management:
- /* Port and Adapter management */
- int (*lldd_clear_nexus_port)(struct sas_port *);
- int (*lldd_clear_nexus_ha)(struct sas_ha_struct *);
- A SAS LLDD should implement at least one of those.
- Phy management:
- /* Phy management */
- int (*lldd_control_phy)(struct sas_phy *, enum phy_func);
- lldd_ha -- set this to point to your HA struct. You can also
- use container_of if you embedded it as shown above.
- A sample initialization and registration function
- can look like this (called last thing from probe())
- *but* before you enable the phys to do OOB:
- static int register_sas_ha(struct my_sas_ha *my_ha)
- {
- int i;
- static struct sas_phy *sas_phys[MAX_PHYS];
- static struct sas_port *sas_ports[MAX_PHYS];
- my_ha->sas_ha.sas_addr = &my_ha->sas_addr[0];
- for (i = 0; i < MAX_PHYS; i++) {
- sas_phys[i] = &my_ha->phys[i].sas_phy;
- sas_ports[i] = &my_ha->sas_ports[i];
- }
- my_ha->sas_ha.sas_phy = sas_phys;
- my_ha->sas_ha.sas_port = sas_ports;
- my_ha->sas_ha.num_phys = MAX_PHYS;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_port_formed = my_port_formed;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_dev_found = my_dev_found;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_dev_gone = my_dev_gone;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_execute_task = my_execute_task;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_abort_task = my_abort_task;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_abort_task_set = my_abort_task_set;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_clear_aca = my_clear_aca;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_clear_task_set = my_clear_task_set;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_I_T_nexus_reset= NULL; (2)
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_lu_reset = my_lu_reset;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_query_task = my_query_task;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_clear_nexus_port = my_clear_nexus_port;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_clear_nexus_ha = my_clear_nexus_ha;
- my_ha->sas_ha.lldd_control_phy = my_control_phy;
- return sas_register_ha(&my_ha->sas_ha);
- }
- (2) SAS 1.1 does not define I_T Nexus Reset TMF.
- Events
- ------
- Events are _the only way_ a SAS LLDD notifies the SAS layer
- of anything. There is no other method or way a LLDD to tell
- the SAS layer of anything happening internally or in the SAS
- domain.
- Phy events:
- PHYE_LOSS_OF_SIGNAL, (C)
- PHYE_OOB_DONE,
- PHYE_OOB_ERROR, (C)
- PHYE_SPINUP_HOLD.
- Port events, passed on a _phy_:
- PORTE_BYTES_DMAED, (M)
- PORTE_BROADCAST_RCVD, (E)
- PORTE_LINK_RESET_ERR, (C)
- PORTE_TIMER_EVENT, (C)
- PORTE_HARD_RESET.
- Host Adapter event:
- HAE_RESET
- A SAS LLDD should be able to generate
- - at least one event from group C (choice),
- - events marked M (mandatory) are mandatory (only one),
- - events marked E (expander) if it wants the SAS layer
- to handle domain revalidation (only one such).
- - Unmarked events are optional.
- Meaning:
- HAE_RESET -- when your HA got internal error and was reset.
- PORTE_BYTES_DMAED -- on receiving an IDENTIFY/FIS frame
- PORTE_BROADCAST_RCVD -- on receiving a primitive
- PORTE_LINK_RESET_ERR -- timer expired, loss of signal, loss
- of DWS, etc. (*)
- PORTE_TIMER_EVENT -- DWS reset timeout timer expired (*)
- PORTE_HARD_RESET -- Hard Reset primitive received.
- PHYE_LOSS_OF_SIGNAL -- the device is gone (*)
- PHYE_OOB_DONE -- OOB went fine and oob_mode is valid
- PHYE_OOB_ERROR -- Error while doing OOB, the device probably
- got disconnected. (*)
- PHYE_SPINUP_HOLD -- SATA is present, COMWAKE not sent.
- (*) should set/clear the appropriate fields in the phy,
- or alternatively call the inlined sas_phy_disconnected()
- which is just a helper, from their tasklet.
- The Execute Command SCSI RPC:
- int (*lldd_execute_task)(struct sas_task *, gfp_t gfp_flags);
- Used to queue a task to the SAS LLDD. @task is the task to be executed.
- @gfp_mask is the gfp_mask defining the context of the caller.
- This function should implement the Execute Command SCSI RPC,
- That is, when lldd_execute_task() is called, the command
- go out on the transport *immediately*. There is *no*
- queuing of any sort and at any level in a SAS LLDD.
- Returns: -SAS_QUEUE_FULL, -ENOMEM, nothing was queued;
- 0, the task(s) were queued.
- struct sas_task {
- dev -- the device this task is destined to
- task_proto -- _one_ of enum sas_proto
- scatter -- pointer to scatter gather list array
- num_scatter -- number of elements in scatter
- total_xfer_len -- total number of bytes expected to be transferred
- data_dir -- PCI_DMA_...
- task_done -- callback when the task has finished execution
- };
- DISCOVERY
- ---------
- The sysfs tree has the following purposes:
- a) It shows you the physical layout of the SAS domain at
- the current time, i.e. how the domain looks in the
- physical world right now.
- b) Shows some device parameters _at_discovery_time_.
- This is a link to the tree(1) program, very useful in
- viewing the SAS domain:
- ftp://mama.indstate.edu/linux/tree/
- I expect user space applications to actually create a
- graphical interface of this.
- That is, the sysfs domain tree doesn't show or keep state if
- you e.g., change the meaning of the READY LED MEANING
- setting, but it does show you the current connection status
- of the domain device.
- Keeping internal device state changes is responsibility of
- upper layers (Command set drivers) and user space.
- When a device or devices are unplugged from the domain, this
- is reflected in the sysfs tree immediately, and the device(s)
- removed from the system.
- The structure domain_device describes any device in the SAS
- domain. It is completely managed by the SAS layer. A task
- points to a domain device, this is how the SAS LLDD knows
- where to send the task(s) to. A SAS LLDD only reads the
- contents of the domain_device structure, but it never creates
- or destroys one.
- Expander management from User Space
- -----------------------------------
- In each expander directory in sysfs, there is a file called
- "smp_portal". It is a binary sysfs attribute file, which
- implements an SMP portal (Note: this is *NOT* an SMP port),
- to which user space applications can send SMP requests and
- receive SMP responses.
- Functionality is deceptively simple:
- 1. Build the SMP frame you want to send. The format and layout
- is described in the SAS spec. Leave the CRC field equal 0.
- open(2)
- 2. Open the expander's SMP portal sysfs file in RW mode.
- write(2)
- 3. Write the frame you built in 1.
- read(2)
- 4. Read the amount of data you expect to receive for the frame you built.
- If you receive different amount of data you expected to receive,
- then there was some kind of error.
- close(2)
- All this process is shown in detail in the function do_smp_func()
- and its callers, in the file "expander_conf.c".
- The kernel functionality is implemented in the file
- "sas_expander.c".
- The program "expander_conf.c" implements this. It takes one
- argument, the sysfs file name of the SMP portal to the
- expander, and gives expander information, including routing
- tables.
- The SMP portal gives you complete control of the expander,
- so please be careful.
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