Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8dca37d | 2020-03-02 09:15:56 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| 2 | |
| 3 | ================================================= |
| 4 | The Linux NCR53C8XX/SYM53C8XX drivers README file |
| 5 | ================================================= |
| 6 | |
| 7 | Written by Gerard Roudier <groudier@free.fr> |
| 8 | |
| 9 | 21 Rue Carnot |
| 10 | |
| 11 | 95170 DEUIL LA BARRE - FRANCE |
| 12 | |
| 13 | 29 May 1999 |
| 14 | |
| 15 | .. Contents: |
| 16 | |
| 17 | 1. Introduction |
| 18 | 2. Supported chips and SCSI features |
| 19 | 3. Advantages of the enhanced 896 driver |
| 20 | 3.1 Optimized SCSI SCRIPTS |
| 21 | 3.2 New features of the SYM53C896 (64 bit PCI dual LVD SCSI controller) |
| 22 | 4. Memory mapped I/O versus normal I/O |
| 23 | 5. Tagged command queueing |
| 24 | 6. Parity checking |
| 25 | 7. Profiling information |
| 26 | 8. Control commands |
| 27 | 8.1 Set minimum synchronous period |
| 28 | 8.2 Set wide size |
| 29 | 8.3 Set maximum number of concurrent tagged commands |
| 30 | 8.4 Set order type for tagged command |
| 31 | 8.5 Set debug mode |
| 32 | 8.6 Clear profile counters |
| 33 | 8.7 Set flag (no_disc) |
| 34 | 8.8 Set verbose level |
| 35 | 8.9 Reset all logical units of a target |
| 36 | 8.10 Abort all tasks of all logical units of a target |
| 37 | 9. Configuration parameters |
| 38 | 10. Boot setup commands |
| 39 | 10.1 Syntax |
| 40 | 10.2 Available arguments |
| 41 | 10.2.1 Master parity checking |
| 42 | 10.2.2 Scsi parity checking |
| 43 | 10.2.3 Scsi disconnections |
| 44 | 10.2.4 Special features |
| 45 | 10.2.5 Ultra SCSI support |
| 46 | 10.2.6 Default number of tagged commands |
| 47 | 10.2.7 Default synchronous period factor |
| 48 | 10.2.8 Negotiate synchronous with all devices |
| 49 | 10.2.9 Verbosity level |
| 50 | 10.2.10 Debug mode |
| 51 | 10.2.11 Burst max |
| 52 | 10.2.12 LED support |
| 53 | 10.2.13 Max wide |
| 54 | 10.2.14 Differential mode |
| 55 | 10.2.15 IRQ mode |
| 56 | 10.2.16 Reverse probe |
| 57 | 10.2.17 Fix up PCI configuration space |
| 58 | 10.2.18 Serial NVRAM |
| 59 | 10.2.19 Check SCSI BUS |
| 60 | 10.2.20 Exclude a host from being attached |
| 61 | 10.2.21 Suggest a default SCSI id for hosts |
| 62 | 10.2.22 Enable use of IMMEDIATE ARBITRATION |
| 63 | 10.3 Advised boot setup commands |
| 64 | 10.4 PCI configuration fix-up boot option |
| 65 | 10.5 Serial NVRAM support boot option |
| 66 | 10.6 SCSI BUS checking boot option |
| 67 | 10.7 IMMEDIATE ARBITRATION boot option |
| 68 | 11. Some constants and flags of the ncr53c8xx.h header file |
| 69 | 12. Installation |
| 70 | 13. Architecture dependent features |
| 71 | 14. Known problems |
| 72 | 14.1 Tagged commands with Iomega Jaz device |
| 73 | 14.2 Device names change when another controller is added |
| 74 | 14.3 Using only 8 bit devices with a WIDE SCSI controller. |
| 75 | 14.4 Possible data corruption during a Memory Write and Invalidate |
| 76 | 14.5 IRQ sharing problems |
| 77 | 15. SCSI problem troubleshooting |
| 78 | 15.1 Problem tracking |
| 79 | 15.2 Understanding hardware error reports |
| 80 | 16. Synchronous transfer negotiation tables |
| 81 | 16.1 Synchronous timings for 53C875 and 53C860 Ultra-SCSI controllers |
| 82 | 16.2 Synchronous timings for fast SCSI-2 53C8XX controllers |
| 83 | 17. Serial NVRAM support (by Richard Waltham) |
| 84 | 17.1 Features |
| 85 | 17.2 Symbios NVRAM layout |
| 86 | 17.3 Tekram NVRAM layout |
| 87 | 18. Support for Big Endian |
| 88 | 18.1 Big Endian CPU |
| 89 | 18.2 NCR chip in Big Endian mode of operations |
| 90 | |
| 91 | 1. Introduction |
| 92 | =============== |
| 93 | |
| 94 | The initial Linux ncr53c8xx driver has been a port of the ncr driver from |
| 95 | FreeBSD that has been achieved in November 1995 by: |
| 96 | |
| 97 | - Gerard Roudier <groudier@free.fr> |
| 98 | |
| 99 | The original driver has been written for 386bsd and FreeBSD by: |
| 100 | |
| 101 | - Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@cologne.de> |
| 102 | - Stefan Esser <se@mi.Uni-Koeln.de> |
| 103 | |
| 104 | It is now available as a bundle of 2 drivers: |
| 105 | |
| 106 | - ncr53c8xx generic driver that supports all the SYM53C8XX family including |
| 107 | the earliest 810 rev. 1, the latest 896 (2 channel LVD SCSI controller) and |
| 108 | the new 895A (1 channel LVD SCSI controller). |
| 109 | - sym53c8xx enhanced driver (a.k.a. 896 drivers) that drops support of oldest |
| 110 | chips in order to gain advantage of new features, as LOAD/STORE instructions |
| 111 | available since the 810A and hardware phase mismatch available with the |
| 112 | 896 and the 895A. |
| 113 | |
| 114 | You can find technical information about the NCR 8xx family in the |
| 115 | PCI-HOWTO written by Michael Will and in the SCSI-HOWTO written by |
| 116 | Drew Eckhardt. |
| 117 | |
| 118 | Information about new chips is available at LSILOGIC web server: |
| 119 | |
| 120 | - http://www.lsilogic.com/ |
| 121 | |
| 122 | SCSI standard documentations are available at SYMBIOS ftp server: |
| 123 | |
| 124 | - ftp://ftp.symbios.com/ |
| 125 | |
| 126 | Useful SCSI tools written by Eric Youngdale are available at tsx-11: |
| 127 | |
| 128 | - ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/ALPHA/scsi/scsiinfo-X.Y.tar.gz |
| 129 | - ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/ALPHA/scsi/scsidev-X.Y.tar.gz |
| 130 | |
| 131 | These tools are not ALPHA but quite clean and work quite well. |
| 132 | It is essential you have the 'scsiinfo' package. |
| 133 | |
| 134 | This short documentation describes the features of the generic and enhanced |
| 135 | drivers, configuration parameters and control commands available through |
| 136 | the proc SCSI file system read / write operations. |
| 137 | |
| 138 | This driver has been tested OK with linux/i386, Linux/Alpha and Linux/PPC. |
| 139 | |
| 140 | Latest driver version and patches are available at: |
| 141 | |
| 142 | - ftp://ftp.tux.org/pub/people/gerard-roudier |
| 143 | |
| 144 | or |
| 145 | |
| 146 | - ftp://ftp.symbios.com/mirror/ftp.tux.org/pub/tux/roudier/drivers |
| 147 | |
| 148 | I am not a native speaker of English and there are probably lots of |
| 149 | mistakes in this README file. Any help will be welcome. |
| 150 | |
| 151 | |
| 152 | 2. Supported chips and SCSI features |
| 153 | ==================================== |
| 154 | |
| 155 | The following features are supported for all chips: |
| 156 | |
| 157 | - Synchronous negotiation |
| 158 | - Disconnection |
| 159 | - Tagged command queuing |
| 160 | - SCSI parity checking |
| 161 | - Master parity checking |
| 162 | |
| 163 | "Wide negotiation" is supported for chips that allow it. The |
| 164 | following table shows some characteristics of NCR 8xx family chips |
| 165 | and what drivers support them. |
| 166 | |
| 167 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 168 | | | | | | |Supported by|Supported by| |
| 169 | | |On board | | | |the generic |the enhanced| |
| 170 | |Chip |SDMS BIOS |Wide |SCSI std. | Max. sync |driver |driver | |
| 171 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 172 | |810 | N | N | FAST10 | 10 MB/s | Y | N | |
| 173 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 174 | |810A | N | N | FAST10 | 10 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 175 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 176 | |815 | Y | N | FAST10 | 10 MB/s | Y | N | |
| 177 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 178 | |825 | Y | Y | FAST10 | 20 MB/s | Y | N | |
| 179 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 180 | |825A | Y | Y | FAST10 | 20 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 181 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 182 | |860 | N | N | FAST20 | 20 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 183 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 184 | |875 | Y | Y | FAST20 | 40 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 185 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 186 | |876 | Y | Y | FAST20 | 40 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 187 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 188 | |895 | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 189 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 190 | |895A | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 191 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 192 | |896 | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 193 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 194 | |897 | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 195 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 196 | |1510D | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB/s | Y | Y | |
| 197 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 198 | |1010 | Y | Y | FAST80 |160 MB/s | N | Y | |
| 199 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 200 | |1010_66 | Y | Y | FAST80 |160 MB/s | N | Y | |
| 201 | |[1]_ | | | | | | | |
| 202 | +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------------+------------+------------+ |
| 203 | |
| 204 | .. [1] Chip supports 33MHz and 66MHz PCI buses. |
| 205 | |
| 206 | |
| 207 | Summary of other supported features: |
| 208 | |
| 209 | :Module: allow to load the driver |
| 210 | :Memory mapped I/O: increases performance |
| 211 | :Profiling information: read operations from the proc SCSI file system |
| 212 | :Control commands: write operations to the proc SCSI file system |
| 213 | :Debugging information: written to syslog (expert only) |
| 214 | :Serial NVRAM: Symbios and Tekram formats |
| 215 | |
| 216 | - Scatter / gather |
| 217 | - Shared interrupt |
| 218 | - Boot setup commands |
| 219 | |
| 220 | |
| 221 | 3. Advantages of the enhanced 896 driver |
| 222 | ======================================== |
| 223 | |
| 224 | 3.1 Optimized SCSI SCRIPTS |
| 225 | -------------------------- |
| 226 | |
| 227 | The 810A, 825A, 875, 895, 896 and 895A support new SCSI SCRIPTS instructions |
| 228 | named LOAD and STORE that allow to move up to 1 DWORD from/to an IO register |
| 229 | to/from memory much faster that the MOVE MEMORY instruction that is supported |
| 230 | by the 53c7xx and 53c8xx family. |
| 231 | The LOAD/STORE instructions support absolute and DSA relative addressing |
| 232 | modes. The SCSI SCRIPTS had been entirely rewritten using LOAD/STORE instead |
| 233 | of MOVE MEMORY instructions. |
| 234 | |
| 235 | 3.2 New features of the SYM53C896 (64 bit PCI dual LVD SCSI controller) |
| 236 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 237 | |
| 238 | The 896 and the 895A allows handling of the phase mismatch context from |
| 239 | SCRIPTS (avoids the phase mismatch interrupt that stops the SCSI processor |
| 240 | until the C code has saved the context of the transfer). |
| 241 | Implementing this without using LOAD/STORE instructions would be painful |
| 242 | and I didn't even want to try it. |
| 243 | |
| 244 | The 896 chip supports 64 bit PCI transactions and addressing, while the |
| 245 | 895A supports 32 bit PCI transactions and 64 bit addressing. |
| 246 | The SCRIPTS processor of these chips is not true 64 bit, but uses segment |
| 247 | registers for bit 32-63. Another interesting feature is that LOAD/STORE |
| 248 | instructions that address the on-chip RAM (8k) remain internal to the chip. |
| 249 | |
| 250 | Due to the use of LOAD/STORE SCRIPTS instructions, this driver does not |
| 251 | support the following chips: |
| 252 | |
| 253 | - SYM53C810 revision < 0x10 (16) |
| 254 | - SYM53C815 all revisions |
| 255 | - SYM53C825 revision < 0x10 (16) |
| 256 | |
| 257 | 4. Memory mapped I/O versus normal I/O |
| 258 | ====================================== |
| 259 | |
| 260 | Memory mapped I/O has less latency than normal I/O. Since |
| 261 | linux-1.3.x, memory mapped I/O is used rather than normal I/O. Memory |
| 262 | mapped I/O seems to work fine on most hardware configurations, but |
| 263 | some poorly designed motherboards may break this feature. |
| 264 | |
| 265 | The configuration option CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_IOMAPPED forces the |
| 266 | driver to use normal I/O in all cases. |
| 267 | |
| 268 | |
| 269 | 5. Tagged command queueing |
| 270 | ========================== |
| 271 | |
| 272 | Queuing more than 1 command at a time to a device allows it to perform |
| 273 | optimizations based on actual head positions and its mechanical |
| 274 | characteristics. This feature may also reduce average command latency. |
| 275 | In order to really gain advantage of this feature, devices must have |
| 276 | a reasonable cache size (No miracle is to be expected for a low-end |
| 277 | hard disk with 128 KB or less). |
| 278 | Some known SCSI devices do not properly support tagged command queuing. |
| 279 | Generally, firmware revisions that fix this kind of problems are available |
| 280 | at respective vendor web/ftp sites. |
| 281 | All I can say is that the hard disks I use on my machines behave well with |
| 282 | this driver with tagged command queuing enabled: |
| 283 | |
| 284 | - IBM S12 0662 |
| 285 | - Conner 1080S |
| 286 | - Quantum Atlas I |
| 287 | - Quantum Atlas II |
| 288 | |
| 289 | If your controller has NVRAM, you can configure this feature per target |
| 290 | from the user setup tool. The Tekram Setup program allows to tune the |
| 291 | maximum number of queued commands up to 32. The Symbios Setup only allows |
| 292 | to enable or disable this feature. |
| 293 | |
| 294 | The maximum number of simultaneous tagged commands queued to a device |
| 295 | is currently set to 8 by default. This value is suitable for most SCSI |
| 296 | disks. With large SCSI disks (>= 2GB, cache >= 512KB, average seek time |
| 297 | <= 10 ms), using a larger value may give better performances. |
| 298 | |
| 299 | The sym53c8xx driver supports up to 255 commands per device, and the |
| 300 | generic ncr53c8xx driver supports up to 64, but using more than 32 is |
| 301 | generally not worth-while, unless you are using a very large disk or disk |
| 302 | array. It is noticeable that most of recent hard disks seem not to accept |
| 303 | more than 64 simultaneous commands. So, using more than 64 queued commands |
| 304 | is probably just resource wasting. |
| 305 | |
| 306 | If your controller does not have NVRAM or if it is managed by the SDMS |
| 307 | BIOS/SETUP, you can configure tagged queueing feature and device queue |
| 308 | depths from the boot command-line. For example:: |
| 309 | |
| 310 | ncr53c8xx=tags:4/t2t3q15-t4q7/t1u0q32 |
| 311 | |
| 312 | will set tagged commands queue depths as follow: |
| 313 | |
| 314 | - target 2 all luns on controller 0 --> 15 |
| 315 | - target 3 all luns on controller 0 --> 15 |
| 316 | - target 4 all luns on controller 0 --> 7 |
| 317 | - target 1 lun 0 on controller 1 --> 32 |
| 318 | - all other target/lun --> 4 |
| 319 | |
| 320 | In some special conditions, some SCSI disk firmwares may return a |
| 321 | QUEUE FULL status for a SCSI command. This behaviour is managed by the |
| 322 | driver using the following heuristic: |
| 323 | |
| 324 | - Each time a QUEUE FULL status is returned, tagged queue depth is reduced |
| 325 | to the actual number of disconnected commands. |
| 326 | |
| 327 | - Every 1000 successfully completed SCSI commands, if allowed by the |
| 328 | current limit, the maximum number of queueable commands is incremented. |
| 329 | |
| 330 | Since QUEUE FULL status reception and handling is resource wasting, the |
| 331 | driver notifies by default this problem to user by indicating the actual |
| 332 | number of commands used and their status, as well as its decision on the |
| 333 | device queue depth change. |
| 334 | The heuristic used by the driver in handling QUEUE FULL ensures that the |
| 335 | impact on performances is not too bad. You can get rid of the messages by |
| 336 | setting verbose level to zero, as follow: |
| 337 | |
| 338 | 1st method: |
| 339 | boot your system using 'ncr53c8xx=verb:0' option. |
| 340 | |
| 341 | 2nd method: |
| 342 | apply "setverbose 0" control command to the proc fs entry |
| 343 | corresponding to your controller after boot-up. |
| 344 | |
| 345 | 6. Parity checking |
| 346 | ================== |
| 347 | |
| 348 | The driver supports SCSI parity checking and PCI bus master parity |
| 349 | checking. These features must be enabled in order to ensure safe data |
| 350 | transfers. However, some flawed devices or mother boards will have |
| 351 | problems with parity. You can disable either PCI parity or SCSI parity |
| 352 | checking by entering appropriate options from the boot command line. |
| 353 | (See 10: Boot setup commands). |
| 354 | |
| 355 | 7. Profiling information |
| 356 | ======================== |
| 357 | |
| 358 | Profiling information is available through the proc SCSI file system. |
| 359 | Since gathering profiling information may impact performances, this |
| 360 | feature is disabled by default and requires a compilation configuration |
| 361 | option to be set to Y. |
| 362 | |
| 363 | The device associated with a host has the following pathname:: |
| 364 | |
| 365 | /proc/scsi/ncr53c8xx/N (N=0,1,2 ....) |
| 366 | |
| 367 | Generally, only 1 board is used on hardware configuration, and that device is:: |
| 368 | |
| 369 | /proc/scsi/ncr53c8xx/0 |
| 370 | |
| 371 | However, if the driver has been made as module, the number of the |
| 372 | hosts is incremented each time the driver is loaded. |
| 373 | |
| 374 | In order to display profiling information, just enter:: |
| 375 | |
| 376 | cat /proc/scsi/ncr53c8xx/0 |
| 377 | |
| 378 | and you will get something like the following text:: |
| 379 | |
| 380 | General information: |
| 381 | Chip NCR53C810, device id 0x1, revision id 0x2 |
| 382 | IO port address 0x6000, IRQ number 10 |
| 383 | Using memory mapped IO at virtual address 0x282c000 |
| 384 | Synchronous transfer period 25, max commands per lun 4 |
| 385 | Profiling information: |
| 386 | num_trans = 18014 |
| 387 | num_kbytes = 671314 |
| 388 | num_disc = 25763 |
| 389 | num_break = 1673 |
| 390 | num_int = 1685 |
| 391 | num_fly = 18038 |
| 392 | ms_setup = 4940 |
| 393 | ms_data = 369940 |
| 394 | ms_disc = 183090 |
| 395 | ms_post = 1320 |
| 396 | |
| 397 | General information is easy to understand. The device ID and the |
| 398 | revision ID identify the SCSI chip as follows: |
| 399 | |
| 400 | ======= ============= =========== |
| 401 | Chip Device id Revision Id |
| 402 | ======= ============= =========== |
| 403 | 810 0x1 < 0x10 |
| 404 | 810A 0x1 >= 0x10 |
| 405 | 815 0x4 |
| 406 | 825 0x3 < 0x10 |
| 407 | 860 0x6 |
| 408 | 825A 0x3 >= 0x10 |
| 409 | 875 0xf |
| 410 | 895 0xc |
| 411 | ======= ============= =========== |
| 412 | |
| 413 | The profiling information is updated upon completion of SCSI commands. |
| 414 | A data structure is allocated and zeroed when the host adapter is |
| 415 | attached. So, if the driver is a module, the profile counters are |
| 416 | cleared each time the driver is loaded. The "clearprof" command |
| 417 | allows you to clear these counters at any time. |
| 418 | |
| 419 | The following counters are available: |
| 420 | |
| 421 | ("num" prefix means "number of", |
| 422 | "ms" means milli-seconds) |
| 423 | |
| 424 | num_trans |
| 425 | Number of completed commands |
| 426 | Example above: 18014 completed commands |
| 427 | |
| 428 | num_kbytes |
| 429 | Number of kbytes transferred |
| 430 | Example above: 671 MB transferred |
| 431 | |
| 432 | num_disc |
| 433 | Number of SCSI disconnections |
| 434 | Example above: 25763 SCSI disconnections |
| 435 | |
| 436 | num_break |
| 437 | number of script interruptions (phase mismatch) |
| 438 | Example above: 1673 script interruptions |
| 439 | |
| 440 | num_int |
| 441 | Number of interrupts other than "on the fly" |
| 442 | Example above: 1685 interruptions not "on the fly" |
| 443 | |
| 444 | num_fly |
| 445 | Number of interrupts "on the fly" |
| 446 | Example above: 18038 interruptions "on the fly" |
| 447 | |
| 448 | ms_setup |
| 449 | Elapsed time for SCSI commands setups |
| 450 | Example above: 4.94 seconds |
| 451 | |
| 452 | ms_data |
| 453 | Elapsed time for data transfers |
| 454 | Example above: 369.94 seconds spent for data transfer |
| 455 | |
| 456 | ms_disc |
| 457 | Elapsed time for SCSI disconnections |
| 458 | Example above: 183.09 seconds spent disconnected |
| 459 | |
| 460 | ms_post |
| 461 | Elapsed time for command post processing |
| 462 | (time from SCSI status get to command completion call) |
| 463 | Example above: 1.32 seconds spent for post processing |
| 464 | |
| 465 | Due to the 1/100 second tick of the system clock, "ms_post" time may |
| 466 | be wrong. |
| 467 | |
| 468 | In the example above, we got 18038 interrupts "on the fly" and only |
| 469 | 1673 script breaks generally due to disconnections inside a segment |
| 470 | of the scatter list. |
| 471 | |
| 472 | |
| 473 | 8. Control commands |
| 474 | =================== |
| 475 | |
| 476 | Control commands can be sent to the driver with write operations to |
| 477 | the proc SCSI file system. The generic command syntax is the |
| 478 | following:: |
| 479 | |
| 480 | echo "<verb> <parameters>" >/proc/scsi/ncr53c8xx/0 |
| 481 | (assumes controller number is 0) |
| 482 | |
| 483 | Using "all" for "<target>" parameter with the commands below will |
| 484 | apply to all targets of the SCSI chain (except the controller). |
| 485 | |
| 486 | Available commands: |
| 487 | |
| 488 | 8.1 Set minimum synchronous period factor |
| 489 | ----------------------------------------- |
| 490 | |
| 491 | setsync <target> <period factor> |
| 492 | |
| 493 | :target: target number |
| 494 | :period: minimum synchronous period. |
| 495 | Maximum speed = 1000/(4*period factor) except for special |
| 496 | cases below. |
| 497 | |
| 498 | Specify a period of 255, to force asynchronous transfer mode. |
| 499 | |
| 500 | - 10 means 25 nano-seconds synchronous period |
| 501 | - 11 means 30 nano-seconds synchronous period |
| 502 | - 12 means 50 nano-seconds synchronous period |
| 503 | |
| 504 | 8.2 Set wide size |
| 505 | ----------------- |
| 506 | |
| 507 | setwide <target> <size> |
| 508 | |
| 509 | :target: target number |
| 510 | :size: 0=8 bits, 1=16bits |
| 511 | |
| 512 | 8.3 Set maximum number of concurrent tagged commands |
| 513 | ---------------------------------------------------- |
| 514 | |
| 515 | settags <target> <tags> |
| 516 | |
| 517 | :target: target number |
| 518 | :tags: number of concurrent tagged commands |
| 519 | must not be greater than SCSI_NCR_MAX_TAGS (default: 8) |
| 520 | |
| 521 | 8.4 Set order type for tagged command |
| 522 | ------------------------------------- |
| 523 | |
| 524 | setorder <order> |
| 525 | |
| 526 | :order: 3 possible values: |
| 527 | |
| 528 | simple: |
| 529 | use SIMPLE TAG for all operations (read and write) |
| 530 | |
| 531 | ordered: |
| 532 | use ORDERED TAG for all operations |
| 533 | |
| 534 | default: |
| 535 | use default tag type, |
| 536 | SIMPLE TAG for read operations |
| 537 | ORDERED TAG for write operations |
| 538 | |
| 539 | |
| 540 | 8.5 Set debug mode |
| 541 | ------------------ |
| 542 | |
| 543 | setdebug <list of debug flags> |
| 544 | |
| 545 | Available debug flags: |
| 546 | |
| 547 | ======== ======================================================== |
| 548 | alloc print info about memory allocations (ccb, lcb) |
| 549 | queue print info about insertions into the command start queue |
| 550 | result print sense data on CHECK CONDITION status |
| 551 | scatter print info about the scatter process |
| 552 | scripts print info about the script binding process |
| 553 | tiny print minimal debugging information |
| 554 | timing print timing information of the NCR chip |
| 555 | nego print information about SCSI negotiations |
| 556 | phase print information on script interruptions |
| 557 | ======== ======================================================== |
| 558 | |
| 559 | Use "setdebug" with no argument to reset debug flags. |
| 560 | |
| 561 | |
| 562 | 8.6 Clear profile counters |
| 563 | -------------------------- |
| 564 | |
| 565 | clearprof |
| 566 | |
| 567 | The profile counters are automatically cleared when the amount of |
| 568 | data transferred reaches 1000 GB in order to avoid overflow. |
| 569 | The "clearprof" command allows you to clear these counters at any time. |
| 570 | |
| 571 | |
| 572 | 8.7 Set flag (no_disc) |
| 573 | ---------------------- |
| 574 | |
| 575 | setflag <target> <flag> |
| 576 | |
| 577 | target: target number |
| 578 | |
| 579 | For the moment, only one flag is available: |
| 580 | |
| 581 | no_disc: not allow target to disconnect. |
| 582 | |
| 583 | Do not specify any flag in order to reset the flag. For example: |
| 584 | |
| 585 | setflag 4 |
| 586 | will reset no_disc flag for target 4, so will allow it disconnections. |
| 587 | |
| 588 | setflag all |
| 589 | will allow disconnection for all devices on the SCSI bus. |
| 590 | |
| 591 | |
| 592 | 8.8 Set verbose level |
| 593 | --------------------- |
| 594 | |
| 595 | setverbose #level |
| 596 | |
| 597 | The driver default verbose level is 1. This command allows to change |
| 598 | th driver verbose level after boot-up. |
| 599 | |
| 600 | 8.9 Reset all logical units of a target |
| 601 | --------------------------------------- |
| 602 | |
| 603 | resetdev <target> |
| 604 | |
| 605 | :target: target number |
| 606 | |
| 607 | The driver will try to send a BUS DEVICE RESET message to the target. |
| 608 | (Only supported by the SYM53C8XX driver and provided for test purpose) |
| 609 | |
| 610 | 8.10 Abort all tasks of all logical units of a target |
| 611 | ----------------------------------------------------- |
| 612 | |
| 613 | cleardev <target> |
| 614 | |
| 615 | :target: target number |
| 616 | |
| 617 | The driver will try to send a ABORT message to all the logical units |
| 618 | of the target. |
| 619 | |
| 620 | (Only supported by the SYM53C8XX driver and provided for test purpose) |
| 621 | |
| 622 | |
| 623 | 9. Configuration parameters |
| 624 | =========================== |
| 625 | |
| 626 | If the firmware of all your devices is perfect enough, all the |
| 627 | features supported by the driver can be enabled at start-up. However, |
| 628 | if only one has a flaw for some SCSI feature, you can disable the |
| 629 | support by the driver of this feature at linux start-up and enable |
| 630 | this feature after boot-up only for devices that support it safely. |
| 631 | |
| 632 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_IOMAPPED (default answer: n) |
| 633 | Answer "y" if you suspect your mother board to not allow memory mapped I/O. |
| 634 | |
| 635 | May slow down performance a little. This option is required by |
| 636 | Linux/PPC and is used no matter what you select here. Linux/PPC |
| 637 | suffers no performance loss with this option since all IO is memory |
| 638 | mapped anyway. |
| 639 | |
| 640 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_DEFAULT_TAGS (default answer: 8) |
| 641 | Default tagged command queue depth. |
| 642 | |
| 643 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_MAX_TAGS (default answer: 8) |
| 644 | This option allows you to specify the maximum number of tagged commands |
| 645 | that can be queued to a device. The maximum supported value is 32. |
| 646 | |
| 647 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_SYNC (default answer: 5) |
| 648 | This option allows you to specify the frequency in MHz the driver |
| 649 | will use at boot time for synchronous data transfer negotiations. |
| 650 | This frequency can be changed later with the "setsync" control command. |
| 651 | 0 means "asynchronous data transfers". |
| 652 | |
| 653 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_FORCE_SYNC_NEGO (default answer: n) |
| 654 | Force synchronous negotiation for all SCSI-2 devices. |
| 655 | |
| 656 | Some SCSI-2 devices do not report this feature in byte 7 of inquiry |
| 657 | response but do support it properly (TAMARACK scanners for example). |
| 658 | |
| 659 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_NO_DISCONNECT (default and only reasonable answer: n) |
| 660 | If you suspect a device of yours does not properly support disconnections, |
| 661 | you can answer "y". Then, all SCSI devices will never disconnect the bus |
| 662 | even while performing long SCSI operations. |
| 663 | |
| 664 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_SYMBIOS_COMPAT |
| 665 | Genuine SYMBIOS boards use GPIO0 in output for controller LED and GPIO3 |
| 666 | bit as a flag indicating singled-ended/differential interface. |
| 667 | If all the boards of your system are genuine SYMBIOS boards or use |
| 668 | BIOS and drivers from SYMBIOS, you would want to enable this option. |
| 669 | |
| 670 | This option must NOT be enabled if your system has at least one 53C8XX |
| 671 | based scsi board with a vendor-specific BIOS. |
| 672 | For example, Tekram DC-390/U, DC-390/W and DC-390/F scsi controllers |
| 673 | use a vendor-specific BIOS and are known to not use SYMBIOS compatible |
| 674 | GPIO wiring. So, this option must not be enabled if your system has |
| 675 | such a board installed. |
| 676 | |
| 677 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_NVRAM_DETECT |
| 678 | Enable support for reading the serial NVRAM data on Symbios and |
| 679 | some Symbios compatible cards, and Tekram DC390W/U/F cards. Useful for |
| 680 | systems with more than one Symbios compatible controller where at least |
| 681 | one has a serial NVRAM, or for a system with a mixture of Symbios and |
| 682 | Tekram cards. Enables setting the boot order of host adaptors |
| 683 | to something other than the default order or "reverse probe" order. |
| 684 | Also enables Symbios and Tekram cards to be distinguished so |
| 685 | CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C8XX_SYMBIOS_COMPAT may be set in a system with a |
| 686 | mixture of Symbios and Tekram cards so the Symbios cards can make use of |
| 687 | the full range of Symbios features, differential, led pin, without |
| 688 | causing problems for the Tekram card(s). |
| 689 | |
| 690 | 10. Boot setup commands |
| 691 | ======================= |
| 692 | |
| 693 | 10.1 Syntax |
| 694 | ----------- |
| 695 | |
| 696 | Setup commands can be passed to the driver either at boot time or as a |
| 697 | string variable using 'insmod'. |
| 698 | |
| 699 | A boot setup command for the ncr53c8xx (sym53c8xx) driver begins with the |
| 700 | driver name "ncr53c8xx="(sym53c8xx). The kernel syntax parser then expects |
| 701 | an optional list of integers separated with comma followed by an optional |
| 702 | list of comma-separated strings. Example of boot setup command under lilo |
| 703 | prompt:: |
| 704 | |
| 705 | lilo: linux root=/dev/hda2 ncr53c8xx=tags:4,sync:10,debug:0x200 |
| 706 | |
| 707 | - enable tagged commands, up to 4 tagged commands queued. |
| 708 | - set synchronous negotiation speed to 10 Mega-transfers / second. |
| 709 | - set DEBUG_NEGO flag. |
| 710 | |
| 711 | Since comma seems not to be allowed when defining a string variable using |
| 712 | 'insmod', the driver also accepts <space> as option separator. |
| 713 | The following command will install driver module with the same options as |
| 714 | above:: |
| 715 | |
| 716 | insmod ncr53c8xx.o ncr53c8xx="tags:4 sync:10 debug:0x200" |
| 717 | |
| 718 | For the moment, the integer list of arguments is discarded by the driver. |
| 719 | It will be used in the future in order to allow a per controller setup. |
| 720 | |
| 721 | Each string argument must be specified as "keyword:value". Only lower-case |
| 722 | characters and digits are allowed. |
| 723 | |
| 724 | In a system that contains multiple 53C8xx adapters insmod will install the |
| 725 | specified driver on each adapter. To exclude a chip use the 'excl' keyword. |
| 726 | |
| 727 | The sequence of commands:: |
| 728 | |
| 729 | insmod sym53c8xx sym53c8xx=excl:0x1400 |
| 730 | insmod ncr53c8xx |
| 731 | |
| 732 | installs the sym53c8xx driver on all adapters except the one at IO port |
| 733 | address 0x1400 and then installs the ncr53c8xx driver to the adapter at IO |
| 734 | port address 0x1400. |
| 735 | |
| 736 | |
| 737 | 10.2 Available arguments |
| 738 | ------------------------ |
| 739 | |
| 740 | 10.2.1 Master parity checking |
| 741 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 742 | |
| 743 | ====== ======== |
| 744 | mpar:y enabled |
| 745 | mpar:n disabled |
| 746 | ====== ======== |
| 747 | |
| 748 | 10.2.2 Scsi parity checking |
| 749 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 750 | |
| 751 | ====== ======== |
| 752 | spar:y enabled |
| 753 | spar:n disabled |
| 754 | ====== ======== |
| 755 | |
| 756 | 10.2.3 Scsi disconnections |
| 757 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 758 | |
| 759 | ====== ======== |
| 760 | disc:y enabled |
| 761 | disc:n disabled |
| 762 | ====== ======== |
| 763 | |
| 764 | 10.2.4 Special features |
| 765 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 766 | |
| 767 | Only apply to 810A, 825A, 860, 875 and 895 controllers. |
| 768 | Have no effect with other ones. |
| 769 | |
| 770 | ======= ================================================= |
| 771 | specf:y (or 1) enabled |
| 772 | specf:n (or 0) disabled |
| 773 | specf:3 enabled except Memory Write And Invalidate |
| 774 | ======= ================================================= |
| 775 | |
| 776 | The default driver setup is 'specf:3'. As a consequence, option 'specf:y' |
| 777 | must be specified in the boot setup command to enable Memory Write And |
| 778 | Invalidate. |
| 779 | |
| 780 | 10.2.5 Ultra SCSI support |
| 781 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 782 | |
| 783 | Only apply to 860, 875, 895, 895a, 896, 1010 and 1010_66 controllers. |
| 784 | Have no effect with other ones. |
| 785 | |
| 786 | ======= ======================== |
| 787 | ultra:n All ultra speeds enabled |
| 788 | ultra:2 Ultra2 enabled |
| 789 | ultra:1 Ultra enabled |
| 790 | ultra:0 Ultra speeds disabled |
| 791 | ======= ======================== |
| 792 | |
| 793 | 10.2.6 Default number of tagged commands |
| 794 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 795 | |
| 796 | ======================= =============================== |
| 797 | tags:0 (or tags:1 ) tagged command queuing disabled |
| 798 | tags:#tags (#tags > 1) tagged command queuing enabled |
| 799 | ======================= =============================== |
| 800 | |
| 801 | #tags will be truncated to the max queued commands configuration parameter. |
| 802 | This option also allows to specify a command queue depth for each device |
| 803 | that support tagged command queueing. |
| 804 | |
| 805 | Example:: |
| 806 | |
| 807 | ncr53c8xx=tags:10/t2t3q16-t5q24/t1u2q32 |
| 808 | |
| 809 | will set devices queue depth as follow: |
| 810 | |
| 811 | - controller #0 target #2 and target #3 -> 16 commands, |
| 812 | - controller #0 target #5 -> 24 commands, |
| 813 | - controller #1 target #1 logical unit #2 -> 32 commands, |
| 814 | - all other logical units (all targets, all controllers) -> 10 commands. |
| 815 | |
| 816 | 10.2.7 Default synchronous period factor |
| 817 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 818 | |
| 819 | ============ ======================================================== |
| 820 | sync:255 disabled (asynchronous transfer mode) |
| 821 | sync:#factor |
| 822 | ============ ======================================= |
| 823 | #factor = 10 Ultra-2 SCSI 40 Mega-transfers / second |
| 824 | #factor = 11 Ultra-2 SCSI 33 Mega-transfers / second |
| 825 | #factor < 25 Ultra SCSI 20 Mega-transfers / second |
| 826 | #factor < 50 Fast SCSI-2 |
| 827 | ============ ======================================= |
| 828 | ============ ======================================================== |
| 829 | |
| 830 | In all cases, the driver will use the minimum transfer period supported by |
| 831 | controllers according to NCR53C8XX chip type. |
| 832 | |
| 833 | 10.2.8 Negotiate synchronous with all devices |
| 834 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 835 | (force sync nego) |
| 836 | |
| 837 | ===== ========= |
| 838 | fsn:y enabled |
| 839 | fsn:n disabled |
| 840 | ===== ========= |
| 841 | |
| 842 | 10.2.9 Verbosity level |
| 843 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 844 | |
| 845 | ====== ========= |
| 846 | verb:0 minimal |
| 847 | verb:1 normal |
| 848 | verb:2 too much |
| 849 | ====== ========= |
| 850 | |
| 851 | 10.2.10 Debug mode |
| 852 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 853 | |
| 854 | ======== ================================================================== |
| 855 | debug:0 clear debug flags |
| 856 | debug:#x set debug flags |
| 857 | |
| 858 | #x is an integer value combining the following power-of-2 values: |
| 859 | |
| 860 | ============= ====== |
| 861 | DEBUG_ALLOC 0x1 |
| 862 | DEBUG_PHASE 0x2 |
| 863 | DEBUG_POLL 0x4 |
| 864 | DEBUG_QUEUE 0x8 |
| 865 | DEBUG_RESULT 0x10 |
| 866 | DEBUG_SCATTER 0x20 |
| 867 | DEBUG_SCRIPT 0x40 |
| 868 | DEBUG_TINY 0x80 |
| 869 | DEBUG_TIMING 0x100 |
| 870 | DEBUG_NEGO 0x200 |
| 871 | DEBUG_TAGS 0x400 |
| 872 | DEBUG_FREEZE 0x800 |
| 873 | DEBUG_RESTART 0x1000 |
| 874 | ============= ====== |
| 875 | ======== ================================================================== |
| 876 | |
| 877 | You can play safely with DEBUG_NEGO. However, some of these flags may |
| 878 | generate bunches of syslog messages. |
| 879 | |
| 880 | 10.2.11 Burst max |
| 881 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 882 | |
| 883 | ========= ================================================================== |
| 884 | burst:0 burst disabled |
| 885 | burst:255 get burst length from initial IO register settings. |
| 886 | burst:#x burst enabled (1<<#x burst transfers max) |
| 887 | |
| 888 | #x is an integer value which is log base 2 of the burst transfers |
| 889 | max. |
| 890 | |
| 891 | The NCR53C875 and NCR53C825A support up to 128 burst transfers |
| 892 | (#x = 7). |
| 893 | |
| 894 | Other chips only support up to 16 (#x = 4). |
| 895 | |
| 896 | This is a maximum value. The driver set the burst length according |
| 897 | to chip and revision ids. By default the driver uses the maximum |
| 898 | value supported by the chip. |
| 899 | ========= ================================================================== |
| 900 | |
| 901 | 10.2.12 LED support |
| 902 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 903 | |
| 904 | ===== =================== |
| 905 | led:1 enable LED support |
| 906 | led:0 disable LED support |
| 907 | ===== =================== |
| 908 | |
| 909 | Donnot enable LED support if your scsi board does not use SDMS BIOS. |
| 910 | (See 'Configuration parameters') |
| 911 | |
| 912 | 10.2.13 Max wide |
| 913 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 914 | |
| 915 | ====== =================== |
| 916 | wide:1 wide scsi enabled |
| 917 | wide:0 wide scsi disabled |
| 918 | ====== =================== |
| 919 | |
| 920 | Some scsi boards use a 875 (ultra wide) and only supply narrow connectors. |
| 921 | If you have connected a wide device with a 50 pins to 68 pins cable |
| 922 | converter, any accepted wide negotiation will break further data transfers. |
| 923 | In such a case, using "wide:0" in the bootup command will be helpful. |
| 924 | |
| 925 | 10.2.14 Differential mode |
| 926 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 927 | |
| 928 | ====== ================================= |
| 929 | diff:0 never set up diff mode |
| 930 | diff:1 set up diff mode if BIOS set it |
| 931 | diff:2 always set up diff mode |
| 932 | diff:3 set diff mode if GPIO3 is not set |
| 933 | ====== ================================= |
| 934 | |
| 935 | 10.2.15 IRQ mode |
| 936 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 937 | |
| 938 | ========= ======================================================== |
| 939 | irqm:0 always open drain |
| 940 | irqm:1 same as initial settings (assumed BIOS settings) |
| 941 | irqm:2 always totem pole |
| 942 | irqm:0x10 driver will not use IRQF_SHARED flag when requesting irq |
| 943 | ========= ======================================================== |
| 944 | |
| 945 | (Bits 0x10 and 0x20 can be combined with hardware irq mode option) |
| 946 | |
| 947 | 10.2.16 Reverse probe |
| 948 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 949 | |
| 950 | ========= ======================================================== |
| 951 | revprob:n probe chip ids from the PCI configuration in this order: |
| 952 | 810, 815, 820, 860, 875, 885, 895, 896 |
| 953 | revprob:y probe chip ids in the reverse order. |
| 954 | ========= ======================================================== |
| 955 | |
| 956 | 10.2.17 Fix up PCI configuration space |
| 957 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 958 | pcifix:<option bits> |
| 959 | |
| 960 | Available option bits: |
| 961 | |
| 962 | === =============================================================== |
| 963 | 0x0 No attempt to fix PCI configuration space registers values. |
| 964 | 0x1 Set PCI cache-line size register if not set. |
| 965 | 0x2 Set write and invalidate bit in PCI command register. |
| 966 | 0x4 Increase if necessary PCI latency timer according to burst max. |
| 967 | === =============================================================== |
| 968 | |
| 969 | Use 'pcifix:7' in order to allow the driver to fix up all PCI features. |
| 970 | |
| 971 | 10.2.18 Serial NVRAM |
| 972 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 973 | |
| 974 | ======= ========================================= |
| 975 | nvram:n do not look for serial NVRAM |
| 976 | nvram:y test controllers for onboard serial NVRAM |
| 977 | ======= ========================================= |
| 978 | |
| 979 | (alternate binary form) |
| 980 | mvram=<bits options> |
| 981 | |
| 982 | ==== ================================================================= |
| 983 | 0x01 look for NVRAM (equivalent to nvram=y) |
| 984 | 0x02 ignore NVRAM "Synchronous negotiation" parameters for all devices |
| 985 | 0x04 ignore NVRAM "Wide negotiation" parameter for all devices |
| 986 | 0x08 ignore NVRAM "Scan at boot time" parameter for all devices |
| 987 | 0x80 also attach controllers set to OFF in the NVRAM (sym53c8xx only) |
| 988 | ==== ================================================================= |
| 989 | |
| 990 | 10.2.19 Check SCSI BUS |
| 991 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 992 | |
| 993 | buschk:<option bits> |
| 994 | |
| 995 | Available option bits: |
| 996 | |
| 997 | ==== ================================================ |
| 998 | 0x0: No check. |
| 999 | 0x1: Check and do not attach the controller on error. |
| 1000 | 0x2: Check and just warn on error. |
| 1001 | 0x4: Disable SCSI bus integrity checking. |
| 1002 | ==== ================================================ |
| 1003 | |
| 1004 | 10.2.20 Exclude a host from being attached |
| 1005 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1006 | |
| 1007 | excl=<io_address> |
| 1008 | |
| 1009 | Prevent host at a given io address from being attached. |
| 1010 | For example 'ncr53c8xx=excl:0xb400,excl:0xc000' indicate to the |
| 1011 | ncr53c8xx driver not to attach hosts at address 0xb400 and 0xc000. |
| 1012 | |
| 1013 | 10.2.21 Suggest a default SCSI id for hosts |
| 1014 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1015 | |
| 1016 | ========== ========================================== |
| 1017 | hostid:255 no id suggested. |
| 1018 | hostid:#x (0 < x < 7) x suggested for hosts SCSI id. |
| 1019 | ========== ========================================== |
| 1020 | |
| 1021 | If a host SCSI id is available from the NVRAM, the driver will ignore |
| 1022 | any value suggested as boot option. Otherwise, if a suggested value |
| 1023 | different from 255 has been supplied, it will use it. Otherwise, it will |
| 1024 | try to deduce the value previously set in the hardware and use value |
| 1025 | 7 if the hardware value is zero. |
| 1026 | |
| 1027 | 10.2.22 Enable use of IMMEDIATE ARBITRATION |
| 1028 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1029 | |
| 1030 | (only supported by the sym53c8xx driver. See 10.7 for more details) |
| 1031 | |
| 1032 | ======= ================================================================= |
| 1033 | iarb:0 do not use this feature. |
| 1034 | iarb:#x use this feature according to bit fields as follow: |
| 1035 | |
| 1036 | ========= ======================================================= |
| 1037 | bit 0 (1) enable IARB each time the initiator has been reselected |
| 1038 | when it arbitrated for the SCSI BUS. |
| 1039 | (#x >> 4) maximum number of successive settings of IARB if the |
| 1040 | initiator win arbitration and it has other commands |
| 1041 | to send to a device. |
| 1042 | ========= ======================================================= |
| 1043 | ======= ================================================================= |
| 1044 | |
| 1045 | Boot fail safe |
| 1046 | safe:y load the following assumed fail safe initial setup |
| 1047 | |
| 1048 | ======================== ====================== ========== |
| 1049 | master parity disabled mpar:n |
| 1050 | scsi parity enabled spar:y |
| 1051 | disconnections not allowed disc:n |
| 1052 | special features disabled specf:n |
| 1053 | ultra scsi disabled ultra:n |
| 1054 | force sync negotiation disabled fsn:n |
| 1055 | reverse probe disabled revprob:n |
| 1056 | PCI fix up disabled pcifix:0 |
| 1057 | serial NVRAM enabled nvram:y |
| 1058 | verbosity level 2 verb:2 |
| 1059 | tagged command queuing disabled tags:0 |
| 1060 | synchronous negotiation disabled sync:255 |
| 1061 | debug flags none debug:0 |
| 1062 | burst length from BIOS settings burst:255 |
| 1063 | LED support disabled led:0 |
| 1064 | wide support disabled wide:0 |
| 1065 | settle time 10 seconds settle:10 |
| 1066 | differential support from BIOS settings diff:1 |
| 1067 | irq mode from BIOS settings irqm:1 |
| 1068 | SCSI BUS check do not attach on error buschk:1 |
| 1069 | immediate arbitration disabled iarb:0 |
| 1070 | ======================== ====================== ========== |
| 1071 | |
| 1072 | 10.3 Advised boot setup commands |
| 1073 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1074 | |
| 1075 | If the driver has been configured with default options, the equivalent |
| 1076 | boot setup is:: |
| 1077 | |
| 1078 | ncr53c8xx=mpar:y,spar:y,disc:y,specf:3,fsn:n,ultra:2,fsn:n,revprob:n,verb:1\ |
| 1079 | tags:0,sync:50,debug:0,burst:7,led:0,wide:1,settle:2,diff:0,irqm:0 |
| 1080 | |
| 1081 | For an installation diskette or a safe but not fast system, |
| 1082 | boot setup can be:: |
| 1083 | |
| 1084 | ncr53c8xx=safe:y,mpar:y,disc:y |
| 1085 | ncr53c8xx=safe:y,disc:y |
| 1086 | ncr53c8xx=safe:y,mpar:y |
| 1087 | ncr53c8xx=safe:y |
| 1088 | |
| 1089 | My personal system works flawlessly with the following equivalent setup:: |
| 1090 | |
| 1091 | ncr53c8xx=mpar:y,spar:y,disc:y,specf:1,fsn:n,ultra:2,fsn:n,revprob:n,verb:1\ |
| 1092 | tags:32,sync:12,debug:0,burst:7,led:1,wide:1,settle:2,diff:0,irqm:0 |
| 1093 | |
| 1094 | The driver prints its actual setup when verbosity level is 2. You can try |
| 1095 | "ncr53c8xx=verb:2" to get the "static" setup of the driver, or add "verb:2" |
| 1096 | to your boot setup command in order to check the actual setup the driver is |
| 1097 | using. |
| 1098 | |
| 1099 | 10.4 PCI configuration fix-up boot option |
| 1100 | ----------------------------------------- |
| 1101 | |
| 1102 | pcifix:<option bits> |
| 1103 | |
| 1104 | Available option bits: |
| 1105 | |
| 1106 | === ===================================================== |
| 1107 | 0x1 Set PCI cache-line size register if not set. |
| 1108 | 0x2 Set write and invalidate bit in PCI command register. |
| 1109 | === ===================================================== |
| 1110 | |
| 1111 | Use 'pcifix:3' in order to allow the driver to fix both PCI features. |
| 1112 | |
| 1113 | These options only apply to new SYMBIOS chips 810A, 825A, 860, 875 |
| 1114 | and 895 and are only supported for Pentium and 486 class processors. |
| 1115 | Recent SYMBIOS 53C8XX scsi processors are able to use PCI read multiple |
| 1116 | and PCI write and invalidate commands. These features require the |
| 1117 | cache line size register to be properly set in the PCI configuration |
| 1118 | space of the chips. On the other hand, chips will use PCI write and |
| 1119 | invalidate commands only if the corresponding bit is set to 1 in the |
| 1120 | PCI command register. |
| 1121 | |
| 1122 | Not all PCI bioses set the PCI cache line register and the PCI write and |
| 1123 | invalidate bit in the PCI configuration space of 53C8XX chips. |
| 1124 | Optimized PCI accesses may be broken for some PCI/memory controllers or |
| 1125 | make problems with some PCI boards. |
| 1126 | |
| 1127 | This fix-up worked flawlessly on my previous system. |
| 1128 | (MB Triton HX / 53C875 / 53C810A) |
| 1129 | I use these options at my own risks as you will do if you decide to |
| 1130 | use them too. |
| 1131 | |
| 1132 | |
| 1133 | 10.5 Serial NVRAM support boot option |
| 1134 | ------------------------------------- |
| 1135 | |
| 1136 | ======= ========================================= |
| 1137 | nvram:n do not look for serial NVRAM |
| 1138 | nvram:y test controllers for onboard serial NVRAM |
| 1139 | ======= ========================================= |
| 1140 | |
| 1141 | This option can also been entered as an hexadecimal value that allows |
| 1142 | to control what information the driver will get from the NVRAM and what |
| 1143 | information it will ignore. |
| 1144 | For details see '17. Serial NVRAM support'. |
| 1145 | |
| 1146 | When this option is enabled, the driver tries to detect all boards using |
| 1147 | a Serial NVRAM. This memory is used to hold user set up parameters. |
| 1148 | |
| 1149 | The parameters the driver is able to get from the NVRAM depend on the |
| 1150 | data format used, as follow: |
| 1151 | |
| 1152 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1153 | | |Tekram format |Symbios format| |
| 1154 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1155 | |General and host parameters | | | |
| 1156 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1157 | | * Boot order | N | Y | |
| 1158 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1159 | | * Host SCSI ID | Y | Y | |
| 1160 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1161 | | * SCSI parity checking | Y | Y | |
| 1162 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1163 | | * Verbose boot messages | N | Y | |
| 1164 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1165 | |SCSI devices parameters | |
| 1166 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1167 | | * Synchronous transfer speed | Y | Y | |
| 1168 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1169 | | * Wide 16 / Narrow | Y | Y | |
| 1170 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1171 | | * Tagged Command Queuing | Y | Y | |
| 1172 | | enabled | | | |
| 1173 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1174 | | * Disconnections enabled | Y | Y | |
| 1175 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1176 | | * Scan at boot time | N | Y | |
| 1177 | +-------------------------------+------------------+--------------+ |
| 1178 | |
| 1179 | In order to speed up the system boot, for each device configured without |
| 1180 | the "scan at boot time" option, the driver forces an error on the |
| 1181 | first TEST UNIT READY command received for this device. |
| 1182 | |
| 1183 | Some SDMS BIOS revisions seem to be unable to boot cleanly with very fast |
| 1184 | hard disks. In such a situation you cannot configure the NVRAM with |
| 1185 | optimized parameters value. |
| 1186 | |
| 1187 | The 'nvram' boot option can be entered in hexadecimal form in order |
| 1188 | to ignore some options configured in the NVRAM, as follow: |
| 1189 | |
| 1190 | mvram=<bits options> |
| 1191 | |
| 1192 | ==== ================================================================= |
| 1193 | 0x01 look for NVRAM (equivalent to nvram=y) |
| 1194 | 0x02 ignore NVRAM "Synchronous negotiation" parameters for all devices |
| 1195 | 0x04 ignore NVRAM "Wide negotiation" parameter for all devices |
| 1196 | 0x08 ignore NVRAM "Scan at boot time" parameter for all devices |
| 1197 | 0x80 also attach controllers set to OFF in the NVRAM (sym53c8xx only) |
| 1198 | ==== ================================================================= |
| 1199 | |
| 1200 | Option 0x80 is only supported by the sym53c8xx driver and is disabled by |
| 1201 | default. Result is that, by default (option not set), the sym53c8xx driver |
| 1202 | will not attach controllers set to OFF in the NVRAM. |
| 1203 | |
| 1204 | The ncr53c8xx always tries to attach all the controllers. Option 0x80 has |
| 1205 | not been added to the ncr53c8xx driver, since it has been reported to |
| 1206 | confuse users who use this driver since a long time. If you desire a |
| 1207 | controller not to be attached by the ncr53c8xx driver at Linux boot, you |
| 1208 | must use the 'excl' driver boot option. |
| 1209 | |
| 1210 | 10.6 SCSI BUS checking boot option. |
| 1211 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1212 | |
| 1213 | When this option is set to a non-zero value, the driver checks SCSI lines |
| 1214 | logic state, 100 micro-seconds after having asserted the SCSI RESET line. |
| 1215 | The driver just reads SCSI lines and checks all lines read FALSE except RESET. |
| 1216 | Since SCSI devices shall release the BUS at most 800 nano-seconds after SCSI |
| 1217 | RESET has been asserted, any signal to TRUE may indicate a SCSI BUS problem. |
| 1218 | Unfortunately, the following common SCSI BUS problems are not detected: |
| 1219 | |
| 1220 | - Only 1 terminator installed. |
| 1221 | - Misplaced terminators. |
| 1222 | - Bad quality terminators. |
| 1223 | |
| 1224 | On the other hand, either bad cabling, broken devices, not conformant |
| 1225 | devices, ... may cause a SCSI signal to be wrong when te driver reads it. |
| 1226 | |
| 1227 | 10.7 IMMEDIATE ARBITRATION boot option |
| 1228 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1229 | |
| 1230 | This option is only supported by the SYM53C8XX driver (not by the NCR53C8XX). |
| 1231 | |
| 1232 | SYMBIOS 53C8XX chips are able to arbitrate for the SCSI BUS as soon as they |
| 1233 | have detected an expected disconnection (BUS FREE PHASE). For this process |
| 1234 | to be started, bit 1 of SCNTL1 IO register must be set when the chip is |
| 1235 | connected to the SCSI BUS. |
| 1236 | |
| 1237 | When this feature has been enabled for the current connection, the chip has |
| 1238 | every chance to win arbitration if only devices with lower priority are |
| 1239 | competing for the SCSI BUS. By the way, when the chip is using SCSI id 7, |
| 1240 | then it will for sure win the next SCSI BUS arbitration. |
| 1241 | |
| 1242 | Since, there is no way to know what devices are trying to arbitrate for the |
| 1243 | BUS, using this feature can be extremely unfair. So, you are not advised |
| 1244 | to enable it, or at most enable this feature for the case the chip lost |
| 1245 | the previous arbitration (boot option 'iarb:1'). |
| 1246 | |
| 1247 | This feature has the following advantages: |
| 1248 | |
| 1249 | a) Allow the initiator with ID 7 to win arbitration when it wants so. |
| 1250 | b) Overlap at least 4 micro-seconds of arbitration time with the execution |
| 1251 | of SCRIPTS that deal with the end of the current connection and that |
| 1252 | starts the next job. |
| 1253 | |
| 1254 | Hmmm... But (a) may just prevent other devices from reselecting the initiator, |
| 1255 | and delay data transfers or status/completions, and (b) may just waste |
| 1256 | SCSI BUS bandwidth if the SCRIPTS execution lasts more than 4 micro-seconds. |
| 1257 | |
| 1258 | The use of IARB needs the SCSI_NCR_IARB_SUPPORT option to have been defined |
| 1259 | at compile time and the 'iarb' boot option to have been set to a non zero |
| 1260 | value at boot time. It is not that useful for real work, but can be used |
| 1261 | to stress SCSI devices or for some applications that can gain advantage of |
| 1262 | it. By the way, if you experience badnesses like 'unexpected disconnections', |
| 1263 | 'bad reselections', etc... when using IARB on heavy IO load, you should not |
| 1264 | be surprised, because force-feeding anything and blocking its arse at the |
| 1265 | same time cannot work for a long time. :-)) |
| 1266 | |
| 1267 | |
| 1268 | 11. Some constants and flags of the ncr53c8xx.h header file |
| 1269 | =========================================================== |
| 1270 | |
| 1271 | Some of these are defined from the configuration parameters. To |
| 1272 | change other "defines", you must edit the header file. Do that only |
| 1273 | if you know what you are doing. |
| 1274 | |
| 1275 | SCSI_NCR_SETUP_SPECIAL_FEATURES (default: defined) |
| 1276 | If defined, the driver will enable some special features according |
| 1277 | to chip and revision id. |
| 1278 | |
| 1279 | For 810A, 860, 825A, 875 and 895 scsi chips, this option enables |
| 1280 | support of features that reduce load of PCI bus and memory accesses |
| 1281 | during scsi transfer processing: burst op-code fetch, read multiple, |
| 1282 | read line, prefetch, cache line, write and invalidate, |
| 1283 | burst 128 (875 only), large dma fifo (875 only), offset 16 (875 only). |
| 1284 | Can be changed by the following boot setup command:: |
| 1285 | |
| 1286 | ncr53c8xx=specf:n |
| 1287 | |
| 1288 | SCSI_NCR_IOMAPPED (default: not defined) |
| 1289 | If defined, normal I/O is forced. |
| 1290 | |
| 1291 | SCSI_NCR_SHARE_IRQ (default: defined) |
| 1292 | If defined, request shared IRQ. |
| 1293 | |
| 1294 | SCSI_NCR_MAX_TAGS (default: 8) |
| 1295 | Maximum number of simultaneous tagged commands to a device. |
| 1296 | |
| 1297 | Can be changed by "settags <target> <maxtags>" |
| 1298 | |
| 1299 | SCSI_NCR_SETUP_DEFAULT_SYNC (default: 50) |
| 1300 | Transfer period factor the driver will use at boot time for synchronous |
| 1301 | negotiation. 0 means asynchronous. |
| 1302 | |
| 1303 | Can be changed by "setsync <target> <period factor>" |
| 1304 | |
| 1305 | SCSI_NCR_SETUP_DEFAULT_TAGS (default: 8) |
| 1306 | Default number of simultaneous tagged commands to a device. |
| 1307 | |
| 1308 | < 1 means tagged command queuing disabled at start-up. |
| 1309 | |
| 1310 | SCSI_NCR_ALWAYS_SIMPLE_TAG (default: defined) |
| 1311 | Use SIMPLE TAG for read and write commands. |
| 1312 | |
| 1313 | Can be changed by "setorder <ordered|simple|default>" |
| 1314 | |
| 1315 | SCSI_NCR_SETUP_DISCONNECTION (default: defined) |
| 1316 | If defined, targets are allowed to disconnect. |
| 1317 | |
| 1318 | SCSI_NCR_SETUP_FORCE_SYNC_NEGO (default: not defined) |
| 1319 | If defined, synchronous negotiation is tried for all SCSI-2 devices. |
| 1320 | |
| 1321 | Can be changed by "setsync <target> <period>" |
| 1322 | |
| 1323 | SCSI_NCR_SETUP_MASTER_PARITY (default: defined) |
| 1324 | If defined, master parity checking is enabled. |
| 1325 | |
| 1326 | SCSI_NCR_SETUP_SCSI_PARITY (default: defined) |
| 1327 | If defined, SCSI parity checking is enabled. |
| 1328 | |
| 1329 | SCSI_NCR_PROFILE_SUPPORT (default: not defined) |
| 1330 | If defined, profiling information is gathered. |
| 1331 | |
| 1332 | SCSI_NCR_MAX_SCATTER (default: 128) |
| 1333 | Scatter list size of the driver ccb. |
| 1334 | |
| 1335 | SCSI_NCR_MAX_TARGET (default: 16) |
| 1336 | Max number of targets per host. |
| 1337 | |
| 1338 | SCSI_NCR_MAX_HOST (default: 2) |
| 1339 | Max number of host controllers. |
| 1340 | |
| 1341 | SCSI_NCR_SETTLE_TIME (default: 2) |
| 1342 | Number of seconds the driver will wait after reset. |
| 1343 | |
| 1344 | SCSI_NCR_TIMEOUT_ALERT (default: 3) |
| 1345 | If a pending command will time out after this amount of seconds, |
| 1346 | an ordered tag is used for the next command. |
| 1347 | |
| 1348 | Avoids timeouts for unordered tagged commands. |
| 1349 | |
| 1350 | SCSI_NCR_CAN_QUEUE (default: 7*SCSI_NCR_MAX_TAGS) |
| 1351 | Max number of commands that can be queued to a host. |
| 1352 | |
| 1353 | SCSI_NCR_CMD_PER_LUN (default: SCSI_NCR_MAX_TAGS) |
| 1354 | Max number of commands queued to a host for a device. |
| 1355 | |
| 1356 | SCSI_NCR_SG_TABLESIZE (default: SCSI_NCR_MAX_SCATTER-1) |
| 1357 | Max size of the Linux scatter/gather list. |
| 1358 | |
| 1359 | SCSI_NCR_MAX_LUN (default: 8) |
| 1360 | Max number of LUNs per target. |
| 1361 | |
| 1362 | |
| 1363 | 12. Installation |
| 1364 | ================ |
| 1365 | |
| 1366 | This driver is part of the linux kernel distribution. |
| 1367 | Driver files are located in the sub-directory "drivers/scsi" of the |
| 1368 | kernel source tree. |
| 1369 | |
| 1370 | Driver files:: |
| 1371 | |
| 1372 | README.ncr53c8xx : this file |
| 1373 | ChangeLog.ncr53c8xx : change log |
| 1374 | ncr53c8xx.h : definitions |
| 1375 | ncr53c8xx.c : the driver code |
| 1376 | |
| 1377 | New driver versions are made available separately in order to allow testing |
| 1378 | changes and new features prior to including them into the linux kernel |
| 1379 | distribution. The following URL provides information on latest available |
| 1380 | patches: |
| 1381 | |
| 1382 | ftp://ftp.tux.org/pub/people/gerard-roudier/README |
| 1383 | |
| 1384 | |
| 1385 | 13. Architecture dependent features |
| 1386 | =================================== |
| 1387 | |
| 1388 | <Not yet written> |
| 1389 | |
| 1390 | |
| 1391 | 14. Known problems |
| 1392 | ================== |
| 1393 | |
| 1394 | 14.1 Tagged commands with Iomega Jaz device |
| 1395 | ------------------------------------------- |
| 1396 | |
| 1397 | I have not tried this device, however it has been reported to me the |
| 1398 | following: This device is capable of Tagged command queuing. However |
| 1399 | while spinning up, it rejects Tagged commands. This behaviour is |
| 1400 | conforms to 6.8.2 of SCSI-2 specifications. The current behaviour of |
| 1401 | the driver in that situation is not satisfying. So do not enable |
| 1402 | Tagged command queuing for devices that are able to spin down. The |
| 1403 | other problem that may appear is timeouts. The only way to avoid |
| 1404 | timeouts seems to edit linux/drivers/scsi/sd.c and to increase the |
| 1405 | current timeout values. |
| 1406 | |
| 1407 | 14.2 Device names change when another controller is added |
| 1408 | --------------------------------------------------------- |
| 1409 | |
| 1410 | When you add a new NCR53C8XX chip based controller to a system that already |
| 1411 | has one or more controllers of this family, it may happen that the order |
| 1412 | the driver registers them to the kernel causes problems due to device |
| 1413 | name changes. |
| 1414 | When at least one controller uses NvRAM, SDMS BIOS version 4 allows you to |
| 1415 | define the order the BIOS will scan the scsi boards. The driver attaches |
| 1416 | controllers according to BIOS information if NvRAM detect option is set. |
| 1417 | |
| 1418 | If your controllers do not have NvRAM, you can: |
| 1419 | |
| 1420 | - Ask the driver to probe chip ids in reverse order from the boot command |
| 1421 | line: ncr53c8xx=revprob:y |
| 1422 | - Make appropriate changes in the fstab. |
| 1423 | - Use the 'scsidev' tool from Eric Youngdale. |
| 1424 | |
| 1425 | 14.3 Using only 8 bit devices with a WIDE SCSI controller |
| 1426 | --------------------------------------------------------- |
| 1427 | |
| 1428 | When only 8 bit NARROW devices are connected to a 16 bit WIDE SCSI controller, |
| 1429 | you must ensure that lines of the wide part of the SCSI BUS are pulled-up. |
| 1430 | This can be achieved by ENABLING the WIDE TERMINATOR portion of the SCSI |
| 1431 | controller card. |
| 1432 | |
| 1433 | The TYAN 1365 documentation revision 1.2 is not correct about such settings. |
| 1434 | (page 10, figure 3.3). |
| 1435 | |
| 1436 | 14.4 Possible data corruption during a Memory Write and Invalidate |
| 1437 | ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| 1438 | |
| 1439 | This problem is described in SYMBIOS DEL 397, Part Number 69-039241, ITEM 4. |
| 1440 | |
| 1441 | In some complex situations, 53C875 chips revision <= 3 may start a PCI |
| 1442 | Write and Invalidate Command at a not cache-line-aligned 4 DWORDS boundary. |
| 1443 | This is only possible when Cache Line Size is 8 DWORDS or greater. |
| 1444 | Pentium systems use a 8 DWORDS cache line size and so are concerned by |
| 1445 | this chip bug, unlike i486 systems that use a 4 DWORDS cache line size. |
| 1446 | |
| 1447 | When this situation occurs, the chip may complete the Write and Invalidate |
| 1448 | command after having only filled part of the last cache line involved in |
| 1449 | the transfer, leaving to data corruption the remainder of this cache line. |
| 1450 | |
| 1451 | Not using Write And Invalidate obviously gets rid of this chip bug, and so |
| 1452 | it is now the default setting of the driver. |
| 1453 | However, for people like me who want to enable this feature, I have added |
| 1454 | part of a work-around suggested by SYMBIOS. This work-around resets the |
| 1455 | addressing logic when the DATA IN phase is entered and so prevents the bug |
| 1456 | from being triggered for the first SCSI MOVE of the phase. This work-around |
| 1457 | should be enough according to the following: |
| 1458 | |
| 1459 | The only driver internal data structure that is greater than 8 DWORDS and |
| 1460 | that is moved by the SCRIPTS processor is the 'CCB header' that contains |
| 1461 | the context of the SCSI transfer. This data structure is aligned on 8 DWORDS |
| 1462 | boundary (Pentium Cache Line Size), and so is immune to this chip bug, at |
| 1463 | least on Pentium systems. |
| 1464 | |
| 1465 | But the conditions of this bug can be met when a SCSI read command is |
| 1466 | performed using a buffer that is 4 DWORDS but not cache-line aligned. |
| 1467 | This cannot happen under Linux when scatter/gather lists are used since |
| 1468 | they only refer to system buffers that are well aligned. So, a work around |
| 1469 | may only be needed under Linux when a scatter/gather list is not used and |
| 1470 | when the SCSI DATA IN phase is reentered after a phase mismatch. |
| 1471 | |
| 1472 | 15. SCSI problem troubleshooting |
| 1473 | ================================ |
| 1474 | |
| 1475 | 15.1 Problem tracking |
| 1476 | --------------------- |
| 1477 | |
| 1478 | Most SCSI problems are due to a non conformant SCSI bus or to buggy |
| 1479 | devices. If unfortunately you have SCSI problems, you can check the |
| 1480 | following things: |
| 1481 | |
| 1482 | - SCSI bus cables |
| 1483 | - terminations at both end of the SCSI chain |
| 1484 | - linux syslog messages (some of them may help you) |
| 1485 | |
| 1486 | If you do not find the source of problems, you can configure the |
| 1487 | driver with no features enabled. |
| 1488 | |
| 1489 | - only asynchronous data transfers |
| 1490 | - tagged commands disabled |
| 1491 | - disconnections not allowed |
| 1492 | |
| 1493 | Now, if your SCSI bus is ok, your system have every chance to work |
| 1494 | with this safe configuration but performances will not be optimal. |
| 1495 | |
| 1496 | If it still fails, then you can send your problem description to |
| 1497 | appropriate mailing lists or news-groups. Send me a copy in order to |
| 1498 | be sure I will receive it. Obviously, a bug in the driver code is |
| 1499 | possible. |
| 1500 | |
| 1501 | My email address: Gerard Roudier <groudier@free.fr> |
| 1502 | |
| 1503 | Allowing disconnections is important if you use several devices on |
| 1504 | your SCSI bus but often causes problems with buggy devices. |
| 1505 | Synchronous data transfers increases throughput of fast devices like |
| 1506 | hard disks. Good SCSI hard disks with a large cache gain advantage of |
| 1507 | tagged commands queuing. |
| 1508 | |
| 1509 | Try to enable one feature at a time with control commands. For example: |
| 1510 | |
| 1511 | :: |
| 1512 | |
| 1513 | echo "setsync all 25" >/proc/scsi/ncr53c8xx/0 |
| 1514 | |
| 1515 | Will enable fast synchronous data transfer negotiation for all targets. |
| 1516 | |
| 1517 | :: |
| 1518 | |
| 1519 | echo "setflag 3" >/proc/scsi/ncr53c8xx/0 |
| 1520 | |
| 1521 | Will reset flags (no_disc) for target 3, and so will allow it to disconnect |
| 1522 | the SCSI Bus. |
| 1523 | |
| 1524 | :: |
| 1525 | |
| 1526 | echo "settags 3 8" >/proc/scsi/ncr53c8xx/0 |
| 1527 | |
| 1528 | Will enable tagged command queuing for target 3 if that device supports it. |
| 1529 | |
| 1530 | Once you have found the device and the feature that cause problems, just |
| 1531 | disable that feature for that device. |
| 1532 | |
| 1533 | 15.2 Understanding hardware error reports |
| 1534 | ----------------------------------------- |
| 1535 | |
| 1536 | When the driver detects an unexpected error condition, it may display a |
| 1537 | message of the following pattern:: |
| 1538 | |
| 1539 | sym53c876-0:1: ERROR (0:48) (1-21-65) (f/95) @ (script 7c0:19000000). |
| 1540 | sym53c876-0: script cmd = 19000000 |
| 1541 | sym53c876-0: regdump: da 10 80 95 47 0f 01 07 75 01 81 21 80 01 09 00. |
| 1542 | |
| 1543 | Some fields in such a message may help you understand the cause of the |
| 1544 | problem, as follows:: |
| 1545 | |
| 1546 | sym53c876-0:1: ERROR (0:48) (1-21-65) (f/95) @ (script 7c0:19000000). |
| 1547 | ............A.........B.C....D.E..F....G.H.......I.....J...K....... |
| 1548 | |
| 1549 | Field A : target number. |
| 1550 | SCSI ID of the device the controller was talking with at the moment the |
| 1551 | error occurs. |
| 1552 | |
| 1553 | Field B : DSTAT io register (DMA STATUS) |
| 1554 | ======== ============================================================= |
| 1555 | Bit 0x40 MDPE Master Data Parity Error |
| 1556 | Data parity error detected on the PCI BUS. |
| 1557 | Bit 0x20 BF Bus Fault |
| 1558 | PCI bus fault condition detected |
| 1559 | Bit 0x01 IID Illegal Instruction Detected |
| 1560 | Set by the chip when it detects an Illegal Instruction format |
| 1561 | on some condition that makes an instruction illegal. |
| 1562 | Bit 0x80 DFE Dma Fifo Empty |
| 1563 | Pure status bit that does not indicate an error. |
| 1564 | ======== ============================================================= |
| 1565 | |
| 1566 | If the reported DSTAT value contains a combination of MDPE (0x40), |
| 1567 | BF (0x20), then the cause may be likely due to a PCI BUS problem. |
| 1568 | |
| 1569 | Field C : SIST io register (SCSI Interrupt Status) |
| 1570 | ======== ================================================================== |
| 1571 | Bit 0x08 SGE SCSI GROSS ERROR |
| 1572 | Indicates that the chip detected a severe error condition |
| 1573 | on the SCSI BUS that prevents the SCSI protocol from functioning |
| 1574 | properly. |
| 1575 | Bit 0x04 UDC Unexpected Disconnection |
| 1576 | Indicates that the device released the SCSI BUS when the chip |
| 1577 | was not expecting this to happen. A device may behave so to |
| 1578 | indicate the SCSI initiator that an error condition not reportable |
| 1579 | using the SCSI protocol has occurred. |
| 1580 | Bit 0x02 RST SCSI BUS Reset |
| 1581 | Generally SCSI targets do not reset the SCSI BUS, although any |
| 1582 | device on the BUS can reset it at any time. |
| 1583 | Bit 0x01 PAR Parity |
| 1584 | SCSI parity error detected. |
| 1585 | ======== ================================================================== |
| 1586 | |
| 1587 | On a faulty SCSI BUS, any error condition among SGE (0x08), UDC (0x04) and |
| 1588 | PAR (0x01) may be detected by the chip. If your SCSI system sometimes |
| 1589 | encounters such error conditions, especially SCSI GROSS ERROR, then a SCSI |
| 1590 | BUS problem is likely the cause of these errors. |
| 1591 | |
| 1592 | For fields D,E,F,G and H, you may look into the sym53c8xx_defs.h file |
| 1593 | that contains some minimal comments on IO register bits. |
| 1594 | |
| 1595 | Field D : SOCL Scsi Output Control Latch |
| 1596 | This register reflects the state of the SCSI control lines the |
| 1597 | chip want to drive or compare against. |
| 1598 | |
| 1599 | Field E : SBCL Scsi Bus Control Lines |
| 1600 | Actual value of control lines on the SCSI BUS. |
| 1601 | |
| 1602 | Field F : SBDL Scsi Bus Data Lines |
| 1603 | Actual value of data lines on the SCSI BUS. |
| 1604 | |
| 1605 | Field G : SXFER SCSI Transfer |
| 1606 | Contains the setting of the Synchronous Period for output and |
| 1607 | the current Synchronous offset (offset 0 means asynchronous). |
| 1608 | |
| 1609 | Field H : SCNTL3 Scsi Control Register 3 |
| 1610 | Contains the setting of timing values for both asynchronous and |
| 1611 | synchronous data transfers. |
| 1612 | |
| 1613 | Understanding Fields I, J, K and dumps requires to have good knowledge of |
| 1614 | SCSI standards, chip cores functionnals and internal driver data structures. |
| 1615 | You are not required to decode and understand them, unless you want to help |
| 1616 | maintain the driver code. |
| 1617 | |
| 1618 | 16. Synchronous transfer negotiation tables |
| 1619 | =========================================== |
| 1620 | |
| 1621 | Tables below have been created by calling the routine the driver uses |
| 1622 | for synchronisation negotiation timing calculation and chip setting. |
| 1623 | The first table corresponds to Ultra chips 53875 and 53C860 with 80 MHz |
| 1624 | clock and 5 clock divisors. |
| 1625 | The second one has been calculated by setting the scsi clock to 40 Mhz |
| 1626 | and using 4 clock divisors and so applies to all NCR53C8XX chips in fast |
| 1627 | SCSI-2 mode. |
| 1628 | |
| 1629 | Periods are in nano-seconds and speeds are in Mega-transfers per second. |
| 1630 | 1 Mega-transfers/second means 1 MB/s with 8 bits SCSI and 2 MB/s with |
| 1631 | Wide16 SCSI. |
| 1632 | |
| 1633 | 16.1 Synchronous timings for 53C895, 53C875 and 53C860 SCSI controllers |
| 1634 | |
| 1635 | +-----------------------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1636 | |Negotiated |NCR settings | | |
| 1637 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ | |
| 1638 | |Factor |Period |Speed |Period |Speed | | |
| 1639 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1640 | |10 | 25 |40.000 | 25 |40.000 | (53C895 only)| |
| 1641 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1642 | |11 | 30.2 |33.112 | 31.25 |32.000 | (53C895 only)| |
| 1643 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1644 | |12 | 50 |20.000 | 50 |20.000 | | |
| 1645 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1646 | |13 | 52 |19.230 | 62 |16.000 | | |
| 1647 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1648 | |14 | 56 |17.857 | 62 |16.000 | | |
| 1649 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1650 | |15 | 60 |16.666 | 62 |16.000 | | |
| 1651 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1652 | |16 | 64 |15.625 | 75 |13.333 | | |
| 1653 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1654 | |17 | 68 |14.705 | 75 |13.333 | | |
| 1655 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1656 | |18 | 72 |13.888 | 75 |13.333 | | |
| 1657 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1658 | |19 | 76 |13.157 | 87 |11.428 | | |
| 1659 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1660 | |20 | 80 |12.500 | 87 |11.428 | | |
| 1661 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1662 | |21 | 84 |11.904 | 87 |11.428 | | |
| 1663 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1664 | |22 | 88 |11.363 | 93 |10.666 | | |
| 1665 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1666 | |23 | 92 |10.869 | 93 |10.666 | | |
| 1667 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1668 | |24 | 96 |10.416 |100 |10.000 | | |
| 1669 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1670 | |25 |100 |10.000 |100 |10.000 | | |
| 1671 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1672 | |26 |104 | 9.615 |112 | 8.888 | | |
| 1673 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1674 | |27 |108 | 9.259 |112 | 8.888 | | |
| 1675 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1676 | |28 |112 | 8.928 |112 | 8.888 | | |
| 1677 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1678 | |29 |116 | 8.620 |125 | 8.000 | | |
| 1679 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1680 | |30 |120 | 8.333 |125 | 8.000 | | |
| 1681 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1682 | |31 |124 | 8.064 |125 | 8.000 | | |
| 1683 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1684 | |32 |128 | 7.812 |131 | 7.619 | | |
| 1685 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1686 | |33 |132 | 7.575 |150 | 6.666 | | |
| 1687 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1688 | |34 |136 | 7.352 |150 | 6.666 | | |
| 1689 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1690 | |35 |140 | 7.142 |150 | 6.666 | | |
| 1691 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1692 | |36 |144 | 6.944 |150 | 6.666 | | |
| 1693 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1694 | |37 |148 | 6.756 |150 | 6.666 | | |
| 1695 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1696 | |38 |152 | 6.578 |175 | 5.714 | | |
| 1697 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1698 | |39 |156 | 6.410 |175 | 5.714 | | |
| 1699 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1700 | |40 |160 | 6.250 |175 | 5.714 | | |
| 1701 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1702 | |41 |164 | 6.097 |175 | 5.714 | | |
| 1703 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1704 | |42 |168 | 5.952 |175 | 5.714 | | |
| 1705 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1706 | |43 |172 | 5.813 |175 | 5.714 | | |
| 1707 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1708 | |44 |176 | 5.681 |187 | 5.333 | | |
| 1709 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1710 | |45 |180 | 5.555 |187 | 5.333 | | |
| 1711 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1712 | |46 |184 | 5.434 |187 | 5.333 | | |
| 1713 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1714 | |47 |188 | 5.319 |200 | 5.000 | | |
| 1715 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1716 | |48 |192 | 5.208 |200 | 5.000 | | |
| 1717 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1718 | |49 |196 | 5.102 |200 | 5.000 | | |
| 1719 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+--------------+ |
| 1720 | |
| 1721 | 16.2 Synchronous timings for fast SCSI-2 53C8XX controllers |
| 1722 | |
| 1723 | +-----------------------------+----------------+ |
| 1724 | |Negotiated |NCR settings | |
| 1725 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1726 | |Factor |Period |Speed |Period |Speed | |
| 1727 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1728 | |25 |100 |10.000 |100 |10.000 | |
| 1729 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1730 | |26 |104 |9.615 |125 | 8.000 | |
| 1731 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1732 | |27 |108 |9.259 |125 | 8.000 | |
| 1733 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1734 | |28 |112 |8.928 |125 | 8.000 | |
| 1735 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1736 | |29 |116 |8.620 |125 | 8.000 | |
| 1737 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1738 | |30 |120 |8.333 |125 | 8.000 | |
| 1739 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1740 | |31 |124 |8.064 |125 | 8.000 | |
| 1741 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1742 | |32 |128 |7.812 |131 | 7.619 | |
| 1743 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1744 | |33 |132 |7.575 |150 | 6.666 | |
| 1745 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1746 | |34 |136 |7.352 |150 | 6.666 | |
| 1747 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1748 | |35 |140 |7.142 |150 | 6.666 | |
| 1749 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1750 | |36 |144 |6.944 |150 | 6.666 | |
| 1751 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1752 | |37 |148 |6.756 |150 | 6.666 | |
| 1753 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1754 | |38 |152 |6.578 |175 | 5.714 | |
| 1755 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1756 | |39 |156 |6.410 |175 | 5.714 | |
| 1757 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1758 | |40 |160 |6.250 |175 | 5.714 | |
| 1759 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1760 | |41 |164 |6.097 |175 | 5.714 | |
| 1761 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1762 | |42 |168 |5.952 |175 | 5.714 | |
| 1763 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1764 | |43 |172 |5.813 |175 | 5.714 | |
| 1765 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1766 | |44 |176 |5.681 |187 | 5.333 | |
| 1767 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1768 | |45 |180 |5.555 |187 | 5.333 | |
| 1769 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1770 | |46 |184 |5.434 |187 | 5.333 | |
| 1771 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1772 | |47 |188 |5.319 |200 | 5.000 | |
| 1773 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1774 | |48 |192 |5.208 |200 | 5.000 | |
| 1775 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1776 | |49 |196 |5.102 |200 | 5.000 | |
| 1777 | +-------+--------+------------+--------+-------+ |
| 1778 | |
| 1779 | |
| 1780 | 17. Serial NVRAM |
| 1781 | ================ |
| 1782 | |
| 1783 | (added by Richard Waltham: dormouse@farsrobt.demon.co.uk) |
| 1784 | |
| 1785 | 17.1 Features |
| 1786 | ------------- |
| 1787 | |
| 1788 | Enabling serial NVRAM support enables detection of the serial NVRAM included |
| 1789 | on Symbios and some Symbios compatible host adaptors, and Tekram boards. The |
| 1790 | serial NVRAM is used by Symbios and Tekram to hold set up parameters for the |
| 1791 | host adaptor and its attached drives. |
| 1792 | |
| 1793 | The Symbios NVRAM also holds data on the boot order of host adaptors in a |
| 1794 | system with more than one host adaptor. This enables the order of scanning |
| 1795 | the cards for drives to be changed from the default used during host adaptor |
| 1796 | detection. |
| 1797 | |
| 1798 | This can be done to a limited extent at the moment using "reverse probe" but |
| 1799 | this only changes the order of detection of different types of cards. The |
| 1800 | NVRAM boot order settings can do this as well as change the order the same |
| 1801 | types of cards are scanned in, something "reverse probe" cannot do. |
| 1802 | |
| 1803 | Tekram boards using Symbios chips, DC390W/F/U, which have NVRAM are detected |
| 1804 | and this is used to distinguish between Symbios compatible and Tekram host |
| 1805 | adaptors. This is used to disable the Symbios compatible "diff" setting |
| 1806 | incorrectly set on Tekram boards if the CONFIG_SCSI_53C8XX_SYMBIOS_COMPAT |
| 1807 | configuration parameter is set enabling both Symbios and Tekram boards to be |
| 1808 | used together with the Symbios cards using all their features, including |
| 1809 | "diff" support. ("led pin" support for Symbios compatible cards can remain |
| 1810 | enabled when using Tekram cards. It does nothing useful for Tekram host |
| 1811 | adaptors but does not cause problems either.) |
| 1812 | |
| 1813 | |
| 1814 | 17.2 Symbios NVRAM layout |
| 1815 | ------------------------- |
| 1816 | |
| 1817 | typical data at NVRAM address 0x100 (53c810a NVRAM):: |
| 1818 | |
| 1819 | 00 00 |
| 1820 | 64 01 |
| 1821 | 8e 0b |
| 1822 | |
| 1823 | 00 30 00 00 00 00 07 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 07 04 10 04 00 00 |
| 1824 | |
| 1825 | 04 00 0f 00 00 10 00 50 00 00 01 00 00 62 |
| 1826 | 04 00 03 00 00 10 00 58 00 00 01 00 00 63 |
| 1827 | 04 00 01 00 00 10 00 48 00 00 01 00 00 61 |
| 1828 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1829 | |
| 1830 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1831 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1832 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1833 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1834 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1835 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1836 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1837 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1838 | |
| 1839 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1840 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1841 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1842 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1843 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1844 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1845 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1846 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1847 | |
| 1848 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1849 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1850 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1851 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1852 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1853 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1854 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1855 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1856 | |
| 1857 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1858 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1859 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1860 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1861 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1862 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1863 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1864 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1865 | |
| 1866 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1867 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1868 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 1869 | |
| 1870 | fe fe |
| 1871 | 00 00 |
| 1872 | 00 00 |
| 1873 | |
| 1874 | NVRAM layout details |
| 1875 | |
| 1876 | ============= ================ |
| 1877 | NVRAM Address |
| 1878 | ============= ================ |
| 1879 | 0x000-0x0ff not used |
| 1880 | 0x100-0x26f initialised data |
| 1881 | 0x270-0x7ff not used |
| 1882 | ============= ================ |
| 1883 | |
| 1884 | general layout:: |
| 1885 | |
| 1886 | header - 6 bytes, |
| 1887 | data - 356 bytes (checksum is byte sum of this data) |
| 1888 | trailer - 6 bytes |
| 1889 | --- |
| 1890 | total 368 bytes |
| 1891 | |
| 1892 | data area layout:: |
| 1893 | |
| 1894 | controller set up - 20 bytes |
| 1895 | boot configuration - 56 bytes (4x14 bytes) |
| 1896 | device set up - 128 bytes (16x8 bytes) |
| 1897 | unused (spare?) - 152 bytes (19x8 bytes) |
| 1898 | --- |
| 1899 | total 356 bytes |
| 1900 | |
| 1901 | header:: |
| 1902 | |
| 1903 | 00 00 - ?? start marker |
| 1904 | 64 01 - byte count (lsb/msb excludes header/trailer) |
| 1905 | 8e 0b - checksum (lsb/msb excludes header/trailer) |
| 1906 | |
| 1907 | controller set up:: |
| 1908 | |
| 1909 | 00 30 00 00 00 00 07 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 07 04 10 04 00 00 |
| 1910 | | | | | |
| 1911 | | | | -- host ID |
| 1912 | | | | |
| 1913 | | | --Removable Media Support |
| 1914 | | | 0x00 = none |
| 1915 | | | 0x01 = Bootable Device |
| 1916 | | | 0x02 = All with Media |
| 1917 | | | |
| 1918 | | --flag bits 2 |
| 1919 | | 0x00000001= scan order hi->low |
| 1920 | | (default 0x00 - scan low->hi) |
| 1921 | --flag bits 1 |
| 1922 | 0x00000001 scam enable |
| 1923 | 0x00000010 parity enable |
| 1924 | 0x00000100 verbose boot msgs |
| 1925 | |
| 1926 | remaining bytes unknown - they do not appear to change in my |
| 1927 | current set up for any of the controllers. |
| 1928 | |
| 1929 | default set up is identical for 53c810a and 53c875 NVRAM |
| 1930 | (Removable Media added Symbios BIOS version 4.09) |
| 1931 | |
| 1932 | boot configuration |
| 1933 | |
| 1934 | boot order set by order of the devices in this table:: |
| 1935 | |
| 1936 | 04 00 0f 00 00 10 00 50 00 00 01 00 00 62 -- 1st controller |
| 1937 | 04 00 03 00 00 10 00 58 00 00 01 00 00 63 2nd controller |
| 1938 | 04 00 01 00 00 10 00 48 00 00 01 00 00 61 3rd controller |
| 1939 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 4th controller |
| 1940 | | | | | | | | | |
| 1941 | | | | | | | ---- PCI io port adr |
| 1942 | | | | | | --0x01 init/scan at boot time |
| 1943 | | | | | --PCI device/function number (0xdddddfff) |
| 1944 | | | ----- ?? PCI vendor ID (lsb/msb) |
| 1945 | ----PCI device ID (lsb/msb) |
| 1946 | |
| 1947 | ?? use of this data is a guess but seems reasonable |
| 1948 | |
| 1949 | remaining bytes unknown - they do not appear to change in my |
| 1950 | current set up |
| 1951 | |
| 1952 | default set up is identical for 53c810a and 53c875 NVRAM |
| 1953 | -------------------------------------------------------- |
| 1954 | |
| 1955 | device set up (up to 16 devices - includes controller):: |
| 1956 | |
| 1957 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 - id 0 |
| 1958 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1959 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1960 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1961 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1962 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1963 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1964 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1965 | |
| 1966 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1967 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1968 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1969 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1970 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1971 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1972 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 |
| 1973 | 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 - id 15 |
| 1974 | | | | | | | |
| 1975 | | | | | ----timeout (lsb/msb) |
| 1976 | | | | --synch period (0x?? 40 Mtrans/sec- fast 40) (probably 0x28) |
| 1977 | | | | (0x30 20 Mtrans/sec- fast 20) |
| 1978 | | | | (0x64 10 Mtrans/sec- fast ) |
| 1979 | | | | (0xc8 5 Mtrans/sec) |
| 1980 | | | | (0x00 asynchronous) |
| 1981 | | | -- ?? max sync offset (0x08 in NVRAM on 53c810a) |
| 1982 | | | (0x10 in NVRAM on 53c875) |
| 1983 | | --device bus width (0x08 narrow) |
| 1984 | | (0x10 16 bit wide) |
| 1985 | --flag bits |
| 1986 | 0x00000001 - disconnect enabled |
| 1987 | 0x00000010 - scan at boot time |
| 1988 | 0x00000100 - scan luns |
| 1989 | 0x00001000 - queue tags enabled |
| 1990 | |
| 1991 | remaining bytes unknown - they do not appear to change in my |
| 1992 | current set up |
| 1993 | |
| 1994 | ?? use of this data is a guess but seems reasonable |
| 1995 | (but it could be max bus width) |
| 1996 | |
| 1997 | default set up for 53c810a NVRAM |
| 1998 | default set up for 53c875 NVRAM |
| 1999 | |
| 2000 | - bus width - 0x10 |
| 2001 | - sync offset ? - 0x10 |
| 2002 | - sync period - 0x30 |
| 2003 | |
| 2004 | ?? spare device space (32 bit bus ??) |
| 2005 | |
| 2006 | :: |
| 2007 | |
| 2008 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 (19x8bytes) |
| 2009 | . |
| 2010 | . |
| 2011 | 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |
| 2012 | |
| 2013 | default set up is identical for 53c810a and 53c875 NVRAM |
| 2014 | -------------------------------------------------------- |
| 2015 | |
| 2016 | trailer:: |
| 2017 | |
| 2018 | fe fe - ? end marker ? |
| 2019 | 00 00 |
| 2020 | 00 00 |
| 2021 | |
| 2022 | default set up is identical for 53c810a and 53c875 NVRAM |
| 2023 | ----------------------------------------------------------- |
| 2024 | |
| 2025 | |
| 2026 | |
| 2027 | 17.3 Tekram NVRAM layout |
| 2028 | ------------------------ |
| 2029 | |
| 2030 | nvram 64x16 (1024 bit) |
| 2031 | |
| 2032 | Drive settings:: |
| 2033 | |
| 2034 | Drive ID 0-15 (addr 0x0yyyy0 = device setup, yyyy = ID) |
| 2035 | (addr 0x0yyyy1 = 0x0000) |
| 2036 | |
| 2037 | x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x |
| 2038 | | | | | | | | | | |
| 2039 | | | | | | | | | ----- parity check 0 - off |
| 2040 | | | | | | | | | 1 - on |
| 2041 | | | | | | | | | |
| 2042 | | | | | | | | ------- sync neg 0 - off |
| 2043 | | | | | | | | 1 - on |
| 2044 | | | | | | | | |
| 2045 | | | | | | | --------- disconnect 0 - off |
| 2046 | | | | | | | 1 - on |
| 2047 | | | | | | | |
| 2048 | | | | | | ----------- start cmd 0 - off |
| 2049 | | | | | | 1 - on |
| 2050 | | | | | | |
| 2051 | | | | | -------------- tagged cmds 0 - off |
| 2052 | | | | | 1 - on |
| 2053 | | | | | |
| 2054 | | | | ---------------- wide neg 0 - off |
| 2055 | | | | 1 - on |
| 2056 | | | | |
| 2057 | --------------------------- sync rate 0 - 10.0 Mtrans/sec |
| 2058 | 1 - 8.0 |
| 2059 | 2 - 6.6 |
| 2060 | 3 - 5.7 |
| 2061 | 4 - 5.0 |
| 2062 | 5 - 4.0 |
| 2063 | 6 - 3.0 |
| 2064 | 7 - 2.0 |
| 2065 | 7 - 2.0 |
| 2066 | 8 - 20.0 |
| 2067 | 9 - 16.7 |
| 2068 | a - 13.9 |
| 2069 | b - 11.9 |
| 2070 | |
| 2071 | Global settings |
| 2072 | |
| 2073 | Host flags 0 (addr 0x100000, 32):: |
| 2074 | |
| 2075 | x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x |
| 2076 | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| 2077 | | | | | | | | | ----------- host ID 0x00 - 0x0f |
| 2078 | | | | | | | | | |
| 2079 | | | | | | | | ----------------------- support for 0 - off |
| 2080 | | | | | | | | > 2 drives 1 - on |
| 2081 | | | | | | | | |
| 2082 | | | | | | | ------------------------- support drives 0 - off |
| 2083 | | | | | | | > 1Gbytes 1 - on |
| 2084 | | | | | | | |
| 2085 | | | | | | --------------------------- bus reset on 0 - off |
| 2086 | | | | | | power on 1 - on |
| 2087 | | | | | | |
| 2088 | | | | | ----------------------------- active neg 0 - off |
| 2089 | | | | | 1 - on |
| 2090 | | | | | |
| 2091 | | | | -------------------------------- imm seek 0 - off |
| 2092 | | | | 1 - on |
| 2093 | | | | |
| 2094 | | | ---------------------------------- scan luns 0 - off |
| 2095 | | | 1 - on |
| 2096 | | | |
| 2097 | -------------------------------------- removable 0 - disable |
| 2098 | as BIOS dev 1 - boot device |
| 2099 | 2 - all |
| 2100 | |
| 2101 | Host flags 1 (addr 0x100001, 33):: |
| 2102 | |
| 2103 | x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x |
| 2104 | | | | | | | |
| 2105 | | | | --------- boot delay 0 - 3 sec |
| 2106 | | | | 1 - 5 |
| 2107 | | | | 2 - 10 |
| 2108 | | | | 3 - 20 |
| 2109 | | | | 4 - 30 |
| 2110 | | | | 5 - 60 |
| 2111 | | | | 6 - 120 |
| 2112 | | | | |
| 2113 | --------------------------- max tag cmds 0 - 2 |
| 2114 | 1 - 4 |
| 2115 | 2 - 8 |
| 2116 | 3 - 16 |
| 2117 | 4 - 32 |
| 2118 | |
| 2119 | Host flags 2 (addr 0x100010, 34):: |
| 2120 | |
| 2121 | x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x |
| 2122 | | |
| 2123 | ----- F2/F6 enable 0 - off ??? |
| 2124 | 1 - on ??? |
| 2125 | |
| 2126 | checksum (addr 0x111111) |
| 2127 | |
| 2128 | checksum = 0x1234 - (sum addr 0-63) |
| 2129 | |
| 2130 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 2131 | |
| 2132 | default nvram data:: |
| 2133 | |
| 2134 | 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 |
| 2135 | 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 |
| 2136 | 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 |
| 2137 | 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 |
| 2138 | |
| 2139 | 0x0f07 0x0400 0x0001 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 |
| 2140 | 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 |
| 2141 | 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 |
| 2142 | 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0xfbbc |
| 2143 | |
| 2144 | |
| 2145 | 18. Support for Big Endian |
| 2146 | ========================== |
| 2147 | |
| 2148 | The PCI local bus has been primarily designed for x86 architecture. |
| 2149 | As a consequence, PCI devices generally expect DWORDS using little endian |
| 2150 | byte ordering. |
| 2151 | |
| 2152 | 18.1 Big Endian CPU |
| 2153 | ------------------- |
| 2154 | |
| 2155 | In order to support NCR chips on a Big Endian architecture the driver has to |
| 2156 | perform byte reordering each time it is needed. This feature has been |
| 2157 | added to the driver by Cort <cort@cs.nmt.edu> and is available in driver |
| 2158 | version 2.5 and later ones. For the moment Big Endian support has only |
| 2159 | been tested on Linux/PPC (PowerPC). |
| 2160 | |
| 2161 | 18.2 NCR chip in Big Endian mode of operations |
| 2162 | ---------------------------------------------- |
| 2163 | |
| 2164 | It can be read in SYMBIOS documentation that some chips support a special |
| 2165 | Big Endian mode, on paper: 53C815, 53C825A, 53C875, 53C875N, 53C895. |
| 2166 | This mode of operations is not software-selectable, but needs pin named |
| 2167 | BigLit to be pulled-up. Using this mode, most of byte reorderings should |
| 2168 | be avoided when the driver is running on a Big Endian CPU. |
| 2169 | Driver version 2.5 is also, in theory, ready for this feature. |