it when considering whether to attach devices. This is to facilitate
`non-SCSI' RAID controller drivers that want to provide SCSI pass-through
services to the kernel.
to be obeying the original spec as to what the numeric value means.
Temperature flags are unaffected- these are still the 'pseudo-thermometers'
and overtemp/undertemp warnings will be caught and translated to SES objects
here.
with XS_CTL_ASYNC if the failed command was called with XS_CTL_ASYNC.
Add a SDF_RESTART flag to keep state, cleared in sddone().
A mounted disk can now spin down, it will propely spin up at the next access.
it to determine the boot device: mvme68k, pc532, macppc, ofppc. Those
platforms should be changed to use device_register(). In the mean time,
those ports defined __BROKEN_DK_ESTABLISH.
Remove "???" from T_IT8_1/2. They actually are pre-press devices for graphic arts as described by ASC IT8
Zeros and blanks scsipi_inquiry_data from byte 58 to byte 74 if additional_length is less than 58
statically. Since this function may called for another luns immediately,
allocating it statically doesn't make sense and may cause race condition
as pointed out by PR#9749.
to remove all xfers from the pending queue. It removes only xfers for
asynchronous transactions. So, simply loop over all pending xfers
with calling scsipi_done and wait xfers to drain. Addresses PR#9703.
if an IRQ was not detected, unless the force flag was given. Use this to
detect if the IRQ was for us (closer to shared IRQ for controllers which
don't have their own IRQ handler in pciide.c) and to poll for DMA xfer.
Also makes the timeout recovery code simpler.
- ATAPI cleanup: don't call controller-specific functions from atapiconf.c
(wdc_*), so that it's possible to attach an atapibus to something else
than a wdc/pciide (Hi Lennart :).
Overload struct scsi_adapter with struct atapi_adapter, defined
as struct scsi_adapter + atapi-specific callbacks. scsipi_link still points
to an scsi_adapter, atapi code casts it to atapi_adapter if needed.
Move atapi_softc to atapiconf.h so that it can be used by the underlying
controller code (e.g. atapi_wdc.c).
Add an atapi-specific callback *atapi_probedev(), which probe a drive
in a controller-specific way, allocate the sc_link and fills in the
ataparams if needed. It then calls atapi_probedev() (from atapiconf.c)
to do the generic initialisations and attach the device.
- While I'm there merge and centralise the state definitions in atavar.h.
It should now be possible to use a common ata/atapi routine to set the
drive's modes (will do later).
timeout()/untimeout() API:
- Clients supply callout handle storage, thus eliminating problems of
resource allocation.
- Insertion and removal of callouts is constant time, important as
this facility is used quite a lot in the kernel.
The old timeout()/untimeout() API has been removed from the kernel.