1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 ============ 4 SYM-2 driver 5 ============ 6 7 Written by Gerard Roudier <groudier@free.fr> 8 9 21 Rue Carnot 10 11 95170 DEUIL LA BARRE - FRANCE 12 13 Updated by Matthew Wilcox <matthew@wil.cx> 14 15 2004-10-09 16 17 .. Contents 18 19 1. Introduction 20 2. Supported chips and SCSI features 21 3. Advantages of this driver for newer chi 22 3.1 Optimized SCSI SCRIPTS 23 3.2 New features appeared with the SY 24 4. Memory mapped I/O versus normal I/O 25 5. Tagged command queueing 26 6. Parity checking 27 7. Profiling information 28 8. Control commands 29 8.1 Set minimum synchronous period 30 8.2 Set wide size 31 8.3 Set maximum number of concurrent 32 8.4 Set debug mode 33 8.5 Set flag (no_disc) 34 8.6 Set verbose level 35 8.7 Reset all logical units of a tar 36 8.8 Abort all tasks of all logical u 37 9. Configuration parameters 38 10. Boot setup commands 39 10.1 Syntax 40 10.2 Available arguments 41 10.2.1 Default number of tagg 42 10.2.2 Burst max 43 10.2.3 LED support 44 10.2.4 Differential mode 45 10.2.5 IRQ mode 46 10.2.6 Check SCSI BUS 47 10.2.7 Suggest a default SCSI 48 10.2.8 Verbosity level 49 10.2.9 Debug mode 50 10.2.10 Settle delay 51 10.2.11 Serial NVRAM 52 10.2.12 Exclude a host from be 53 10.3 Converting from old options 54 10.4 SCSI BUS checking boot option 55 11. SCSI problem troubleshooting 56 15.1 Problem tracking 57 15.2 Understanding hardware error rep 58 12. Serial NVRAM support (by Richard Waltha 59 17.1 Features 60 17.2 Symbios NVRAM layout 61 17.3 Tekram NVRAM layout 62 63 64 1. Introduction 65 =============== 66 67 This driver supports the whole SYM53C8XX famil 68 It also support the subset of LSI53C10XX PCI-S 69 on the SYM53C8XX SCRIPTS language. 70 71 It replaces the sym53c8xx+ncr53c8xx driver bun 72 with the FreeBSD SYM-2 driver. The 'glue' that 73 under Linux is contained in 2 files named sym_ 74 Other drivers files are intended not to depend 75 on which the driver is used. 76 77 The history of this driver can be summarized a 78 79 1993: ncr driver written for 386bsd and FreeBS 80 81 - Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@c 82 - Stefan Esser <se@mi. 83 84 1996: port of the ncr driver to Linux-1.2.13 a 85 86 - Gerard Roudier 87 88 1998: new sym53c8xx driver for Linux based on 89 adds full support for the 896 but drops 90 91 - Gerard Roudier 92 93 1999: port of the sym53c8xx driver to FreeBSD 94 33 MHz and 66MHz Ultra-3 controllers. Th 95 96 - Gerard Roudier 97 98 2000: Add support for early NCR devices to Fre 99 Break the driver into several sources an 100 code from the core code that can be shar 101 Write a glue code for Linux. 102 103 - Gerard Roudier 104 105 2004: Remove FreeBSD compatibility code. Remo 106 Linux before 2.6. Start using Linux fac 107 108 This README file addresses the Linux version o 109 the driver documentation is the sym.8 man page 110 111 Information about new chips is available at LS 112 113 http://www.lsilogic.com/ 114 115 SCSI standard documentations are available at 116 117 http://www.t10.org/ 118 119 Useful SCSI tools written by Eric Youngdale ar 120 distributions: 121 122 ============ ========================== 123 scsiinfo command line tool 124 scsi-config TCL/Tk tool using scsiinfo 125 ============ ========================== 126 127 2. Supported chips and SCSI features 128 ==================================== 129 130 The following features are supported for all c 131 132 - Synchronous negotiation 133 - Disconnection 134 - Tagged command queuing 135 - SCSI parity checking 136 - PCI Master parity checking 137 138 Other features depends on chip capabilities. 139 140 The driver notably uses optimized SCRIPTS for 141 LOAD/STORE and handles PHASE MISMATCH from SCR 142 support the corresponding feature. 143 144 The following table shows some characteristics 145 146 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 147 | | | | | 148 | |On board | | | 149 |Chip |SDMS BIOS |Wide |SCSI std. | Max. 150 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 151 |810 | N | N | FAST10 | 10 MB 152 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 153 |810A | N | N | FAST10 | 10 MB 154 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 155 |815 | Y | N | FAST10 | 10 MB 156 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 157 |825 | Y | Y | FAST10 | 20 MB 158 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 159 |825A | Y | Y | FAST10 | 20 MB 160 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 161 |860 | N | N | FAST20 | 20 MB 162 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 163 |875 | Y | Y | FAST20 | 40 MB 164 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 165 |875A | Y | Y | FAST20 | 40 MB 166 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 167 |876 | Y | Y | FAST20 | 40 MB 168 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 169 |895 | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB 170 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 171 |895A | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB 172 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 173 |896 | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB 174 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 175 |897 | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB 176 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 177 |1510D | Y | Y | FAST40 | 80 MB 178 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 179 |1010 | Y | Y | FAST80 |160 MB 180 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 181 |1010_66 | Y | Y | FAST80 |160 MB 182 |[1]_ | | | | 183 +--------+-----------+-----+-----------+------ 184 185 .. [1] Chip supports 33MHz and 66MHz PCI bus c 186 187 188 Summary of other supported features: 189 190 :Module: allow to load the driv 191 :Memory mapped I/O: increases performance 192 :Control commands: write operations to th 193 :Debugging information: written to syslog (exp 194 :Serial NVRAM: Symbios and Tekram for 195 196 - Scatter / gather 197 - Shared interrupt 198 - Boot setup commands 199 200 201 3. Advantages of this driver for newer chips. 202 ============================================= 203 204 3.1 Optimized SCSI SCRIPTS 205 -------------------------- 206 207 All chips except the 810, 815 and 825, support 208 named LOAD and STORE that allow to move up to 209 to/from memory much faster that the MOVE MEMOR 210 by the 53c7xx and 53c8xx family. 211 212 The LOAD/STORE instructions support absolute a 213 modes. The SCSI SCRIPTS had been entirely rewr 214 of MOVE MEMORY instructions. 215 216 Due to the lack of LOAD/STORE SCRIPTS instruct 217 driver also incorporates a different SCRIPTS s 218 order to provide support for the entire SYM53C 219 220 3.2 New features appeared with the SYM53C896 221 -------------------------------------------- 222 223 Newer chips (see above) allows handling of the 224 SCRIPTS (avoids the phase mismatch interrupt t 225 until the C code has saved the context of the 226 227 The 896 and 1010 chips support 64 bit PCI tran 228 while the 895A supports 32 bit PCI transaction 229 The SCRIPTS processor of these chips is not tr 230 registers for bit 32-63. Another interesting f 231 instructions that address the on-chip RAM (8k) 232 233 4. Memory mapped I/O versus normal I/O 234 ====================================== 235 236 Memory mapped I/O has less latency than normal 237 way for doing IO with PCI devices. Memory mapp 238 most hardware configurations, but some poorly 239 this feature. A configuration option is provid 240 used but the driver defaults to MMIO. 241 242 5. Tagged command queueing 243 ========================== 244 245 Queuing more than 1 command at a time to a dev 246 optimizations based on actual head positions a 247 characteristics. This feature may also reduce 248 In order to really gain advantage of this feat 249 a reasonable cache size (No miracle is to be e 250 hard disk with 128 KB or less). 251 252 Some known old SCSI devices do not properly su 253 Generally, firmware revisions that fix this ki 254 at respective vendor web/ftp sites. 255 256 All I can say is that I never have had problem 257 this driver and its predecessors. Hard disks t 258 me using tagged commands are the following: 259 260 - IBM S12 0662 261 - Conner 1080S 262 - Quantum Atlas I 263 - Quantum Atlas II 264 - Seagate Cheetah I 265 - Quantum Viking II 266 - IBM DRVS 267 - Quantum Atlas IV 268 - Seagate Cheetah II 269 270 If your controller has NVRAM, you can configur 271 from the user setup tool. The Tekram Setup pro 272 maximum number of queued commands up to 32. Th 273 to enable or disable this feature. 274 275 The maximum number of simultaneous tagged comm 276 is currently set to 16 by default. This value 277 disks. With large SCSI disks (>= 2GB, cache > 278 <= 10 ms), using a larger value may give bette 279 280 This driver supports up to 255 commands per de 281 64 is generally not worth-while, unless you ar 282 disk arrays. It is noticeable that most of rec 283 accept more than 64 simultaneous commands. So, 284 commands is probably just resource wasting. 285 286 If your controller does not have NVRAM or if i 287 BIOS/SETUP, you can configure tagged queueing 288 depths from the boot command-line. For example 289 290 sym53c8xx=tags:4/t2t3q15-t4q7/t1u0q32 291 292 will set tagged commands queue depths as follo 293 294 - target 2 all luns on controller 0 --> 15 295 - target 3 all luns on controller 0 --> 15 296 - target 4 all luns on controller 0 --> 7 297 - target 1 lun 0 on controller 1 --> 32 298 - all other target/lun --> 4 299 300 In some special conditions, some SCSI disk fir 301 QUEUE FULL status for a SCSI command. This beh 302 driver using the following heuristic: 303 304 - Each time a QUEUE FULL status is returned, t 305 to the actual number of disconnected command 306 307 - Every 200 successfully completed SCSI comman 308 current limit, the maximum number of queueab 309 310 Since QUEUE FULL status reception and handling 311 driver notifies by default this problem to use 312 number of commands used and their status, as w 313 device queue depth change. 314 The heuristic used by the driver in handling Q 315 impact on performances is not too bad. You can 316 setting verbose level to zero, as follow: 317 318 1st method: 319 boot your system using 'sym53c8xx= 320 2nd method: 321 apply "setverbose 0" control comma 322 corresponding to your controller a 323 324 6. Parity checking 325 ================== 326 327 The driver supports SCSI parity checking and P 328 checking. These features must be enabled in o 329 data transfers. Some flawed devices or mother 330 with parity. The options to defeat parity che 331 from the driver. 332 333 7. Profiling information 334 ======================== 335 336 This driver does not provide profiling informa 337 This feature was not this useful and added com 338 As the driver code got more complex, I have de 339 that didn't seem actually useful. 340 341 8. Control commands 342 =================== 343 344 Control commands can be sent to the driver wit 345 the proc SCSI file system. The generic command 346 following:: 347 348 echo "<verb> <parameters>" >/proc/scsi/s 349 (assumes controller number is 0) 350 351 Using "all" for "<target>" parameter with the 352 apply to all targets of the SCSI chain (except 353 354 Available commands: 355 356 8.1 Set minimum synchronous period factor 357 ----------------------------------------- 358 359 setsync <target> <period factor> 360 361 :target: target number 362 :period: minimum synchronous period. 363 Maximum speed = 1000/(4*period 364 cases below. 365 366 Specify a period of 0, to force asynchrono 367 368 - 9 means 12.5 nano-seconds synchronous 369 - 10 means 25 nano-seconds synchronous pe 370 - 11 means 30 nano-seconds synchronous pe 371 - 12 means 50 nano-seconds synchronous pe 372 373 8.2 Set wide size 374 ----------------- 375 376 setwide <target> <size> 377 378 :target: target number 379 :size: 0=8 bits, 1=16bits 380 381 8.3 Set maximum number of concurrent tagged co 382 ---------------------------------------------- 383 384 settags <target> <tags> 385 386 :target: target number 387 :tags: number of concurrent tagged com 388 must not be greater than config 389 390 8.4 Set debug mode 391 ------------------ 392 393 setdebug <list of debug flags> 394 395 Available debug flags: 396 397 ======== ============================= 398 alloc print info about memory alloc 399 queue print info about insertions i 400 result print sense data on CHECK CON 401 scatter print info about the scatter 402 scripts print info about the script b 403 tiny print minimal debugging infor 404 timing print timing information of t 405 nego print information about SCSI 406 phase print information on script i 407 ======== ============================= 408 409 Use "setdebug" with no argument to reset d 410 411 412 8.5 Set flag (no_disc) 413 ---------------------- 414 415 setflag <target> <flag> 416 417 :target: target number 418 419 For the moment, only one flag is available 420 421 no_disc: not allow target to disconn 422 423 Do not specify any flag in order to reset 424 425 setflag 4 426 will reset no_disc flag for target 4, so 427 setflag all 428 will allow disconnection for all devices 429 430 431 8.6 Set verbose level 432 --------------------- 433 434 setverbose #level 435 436 The driver default verbose level is 1. Thi 437 th driver verbose level after boot-up. 438 439 8.7 Reset all logical units of a target 440 --------------------------------------- 441 442 resetdev <target> 443 444 :target: target number 445 446 The driver will try to send a BUS DEVICE R 447 448 8.8 Abort all tasks of all logical units of a 449 ---------------------------------------------- 450 451 cleardev <target> 452 453 :target: target number 454 455 The driver will try to send a ABORT messag 456 of the target. 457 458 459 9. Configuration parameters 460 =========================== 461 462 Under kernel configuration tools (make menucon 463 possible to change some default driver configu 464 If the firmware of all your devices is perfect 465 features supported by the driver can be enable 466 if only one has a flaw for some SCSI feature, 467 support by the driver of this feature at linux 468 this feature after boot-up only for devices th 469 470 Configuration parameters: 471 472 Use normal IO (default 473 Answer "y" if you suspect your mother boar 474 May slow down performance a little. 475 476 Default tagged command queue depth (default 477 Entering 0 defaults to tagged commands not 478 This parameter can be specified from the b 479 480 Maximum number of queued commands (default 481 This option allows you to specify the maxi 482 that can be queued to a device. The maximu 483 484 Synchronous transfers frequency (default 485 This option allows you to specify the freq 486 will use at boot time for synchronous data 487 0 means "asynchronous data transfers". 488 489 10. Boot setup commands 490 ======================= 491 492 10.1 Syntax 493 ----------- 494 495 Setup commands can be passed to the driver eit 496 parameters to modprobe, as described in Docume 497 498 Example of boot setup command under lilo promp 499 500 lilo: linux root=/dev/sda2 sym53c8xx.cmd_p 501 502 - enable tagged commands, up to 4 tagged comma 503 - set synchronous negotiation speed to 10 Mega 504 - set DEBUG_NEGO flag. 505 506 The following command will install the driver 507 options as above:: 508 509 modprobe sym53c8xx cmd_per_lun=4 sync=10 d 510 511 10.2 Available arguments 512 ------------------------ 513 514 10.2.1 Default number of tagged commands 515 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 516 - cmd_per_lun=0 (or cmd_per_lun=1) tag 517 - cmd_per_lun=#tags (#tags > 1) tagged 518 519 #tags will be truncated to the max queued co 520 521 10.2.2 Burst max 522 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 523 524 ========== =========================== 525 burst=0 burst disabled 526 burst=255 get burst length from initi 527 burst=#x burst enabled (1<<#x burst 528 529 #x is an integer value whic 530 transfers max. 531 ========== =========================== 532 533 By default the driver uses the maximum value 534 535 10.2.3 LED support 536 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 537 538 ===== =================== 539 led=1 enable LED support 540 led=0 disable LED support 541 ===== =================== 542 543 Do not enable LED support if your scsi board 544 (See 'Configuration parameters') 545 546 10.2.4 Differential mode 547 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 548 549 ====== ============================== 550 diff=0 never set up diff mode 551 diff=1 set up diff mode if BIOS set i 552 diff=2 always set up diff mode 553 diff=3 set diff mode if GPIO3 is not 554 ====== ============================== 555 556 10.2.5 IRQ mode 557 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 558 559 ====== =========================== 560 irqm=0 always open drain 561 irqm=1 same as initial settings (a 562 irqm=2 always totem pole 563 ====== =========================== 564 565 10.2.6 Check SCSI BUS 566 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 567 568 buschk=<option bits> 569 570 Available option bits: 571 572 === =============================== 573 0x0 No check. 574 0x1 Check and do not attach the con 575 0x2 Check and just warn on error. 576 === =============================== 577 578 10.2.7 Suggest a default SCSI id for hosts 579 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 580 581 ========== ====================== 582 hostid=255 no id suggested. 583 hostid=#x (0 < x < 7) x suggeste 584 ========== ====================== 585 586 If a host SCSI id is available from the NV 587 any value suggested as boot option. Otherw 588 different from 255 has been supplied, it w 589 try to deduce the value previously set in 590 7 if the hardware value is zero. 591 592 10.2.8 Verbosity level 593 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 594 595 ====== ======== 596 verb=0 minimal 597 verb=1 normal 598 verb=2 too much 599 ====== ======== 600 601 10.2.9 Debug mode 602 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 603 604 ========= ========================== 605 debug=0 clear debug flags 606 debug=#x set debug flags 607 608 #x is an integer value com 609 following power-of-2 value 610 611 ============= ====== 612 DEBUG_ALLOC 0x1 613 DEBUG_PHASE 0x2 614 DEBUG_POLL 0x4 615 DEBUG_QUEUE 0x8 616 DEBUG_RESULT 0x10 617 DEBUG_SCATTER 0x20 618 DEBUG_SCRIPT 0x40 619 DEBUG_TINY 0x80 620 DEBUG_TIMING 0x100 621 DEBUG_NEGO 0x200 622 DEBUG_TAGS 0x400 623 DEBUG_FREEZE 0x800 624 DEBUG_RESTART 0x1000 625 ============= ====== 626 ========= ========================== 627 628 You can play safely with DEBUG_NEGO. However 629 generate bunches of syslog messages. 630 631 10.2.10 Settle delay 632 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 633 634 ======== =================== 635 settle=n delay for n seconds 636 ======== =================== 637 638 After a bus reset, the driver will delay for 639 to any device on the bus. The default is 3 640 default it to 10. 641 642 10.2.11 Serial NVRAM 643 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 644 645 .. Note:: option not currently impleme 646 647 ======= ========================== 648 nvram=n do not look for serial NVR 649 nvram=y test controllers for onboa 650 ======= ========================== 651 652 (alternate binary form) 653 654 nvram=<bits options> 655 656 ==== =============================== 657 0x01 look for NVRAM (equivalent to 658 0x02 ignore NVRAM "Synchronous negot 659 0x04 ignore NVRAM "Wide negotiation" 660 0x08 ignore NVRAM "Scan at boot time 661 0x80 also attach controllers set to 662 ==== =============================== 663 664 10.2.12 Exclude a host from being attached 665 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 666 667 excl=<io_address>,... 668 669 Prevent host at a given io address from be 670 For example 'excl=0xb400,0xc000' indicate 671 driver not to attach hosts at address 0xb4 672 673 10.3 Converting from old style options 674 -------------------------------------- 675 676 Previously, the sym2 driver accepted arguments 677 678 sym53c8xx=tags:4,sync:10,debug:0x200 679 680 As a result of the new module parameters, this 681 Most of the options have remained the same, bu 682 cmd_per_lun to reflect its different purposes. 683 be specified as:: 684 685 modprobe sym53c8xx cmd_per_lun=4 sync= 686 687 or on the kernel boot line as:: 688 689 sym53c8xx.cmd_per_lun=4 sym53c8xx.sync 690 691 10.4 SCSI BUS checking boot option 692 ---------------------------------- 693 694 When this option is set to a non-zero value, t 695 logic state, 100 micro-seconds after having as 696 The driver just reads SCSI lines and checks al 697 Since SCSI devices shall release the BUS at mo 698 RESET has been asserted, any signal to TRUE ma 699 Unfortunately, the following common SCSI BUS p 700 701 - Only 1 terminator installed. 702 - Misplaced terminators. 703 - Bad quality terminators. 704 705 On the other hand, either bad cabling, broken 706 devices, ... may cause a SCSI signal to be wro 707 708 15. SCSI problem troubleshooting 709 ================================ 710 711 15.1 Problem tracking 712 --------------------- 713 714 Most SCSI problems are due to a non conformant 715 devices. If unfortunately you have SCSI probl 716 following things: 717 718 - SCSI bus cables 719 - terminations at both end of the SCSI chain 720 - linux syslog messages (some of them may help 721 722 If you do not find the source of problems, you 723 driver or devices in the NVRAM with minimal fe 724 725 - only asynchronous data transfers 726 - tagged commands disabled 727 - disconnections not allowed 728 729 Now, if your SCSI bus is ok, your system has e 730 with this safe configuration but performances 731 732 If it still fails, then you can send your prob 733 appropriate mailing lists or news-groups. Sen 734 be sure I will receive it. Obviously, a bug i 735 possible. 736 737 My current email address: Gerard Roudier <gro 738 739 Allowing disconnections is important if you us 740 your SCSI bus but often causes problems with b 741 Synchronous data transfers increases throughpu 742 hard disks. Good SCSI hard disks with a large 743 tagged commands queuing. 744 745 15.2 Understanding hardware error reports 746 ----------------------------------------- 747 748 When the driver detects an unexpected error co 749 message of the following pattern:: 750 751 sym0:1: ERROR (0:48) (1-21-65) (f/95/0) @ 752 sym0: script cmd = 19000000 753 sym0: regdump: da 10 80 95 47 0f 01 07 75 754 755 Some fields in such a message may help you und 756 problem, as follows:: 757 758 sym0:1: ERROR (0:48) (1-21-65) (f/95/0) @ 759 .....A.........B.C....D.E..F....G.H..I.... 760 761 Field A : target number. 762 SCSI ID of the device the controller was tal 763 error occurs. 764 765 Field B : DSTAT io register (DMA STATUS) 766 ======== ================================= 767 Bit 0x40 MDPE Master Data Parity Error 768 Data parity error detected on the 769 Bit 0x20 BF Bus Fault 770 PCI bus fault condition detected 771 Bit 0x01 IID Illegal Instruction Detected 772 Set by the chip when it detects a 773 on some condition that makes an i 774 Bit 0x80 DFE Dma Fifo Empty 775 Pure status bit that does not ind 776 ======== ================================= 777 778 If the reported DSTAT value contains a combi 779 BF (0x20), then the cause may be likely due 780 781 Field C : SIST io register (SCSI Interrupt Sta 782 ======== ================================= 783 Bit 0x08 SGE SCSI GROSS ERROR 784 Indicates that the chip detected 785 on the SCSI BUS that prevents the 786 properly. 787 Bit 0x04 UDC Unexpected Disconnection 788 Indicates that the device release 789 was not expecting this to happen. 790 indicate the SCSI initiator that 791 Bit 0x02 RST SCSI BUS Reset 792 Generally SCSI targets do not res 793 device on the BUS can reset it at 794 Bit 0x01 PAR Parity 795 SCSI parity error detected. 796 ======== ================================= 797 798 On a faulty SCSI BUS, any error condition am 799 PAR (0x01) may be detected by the chip. If y 800 encounters such error conditions, especially 801 BUS problem is likely the cause of these err 802 803 For fields D,E,F,G and H, you may look into th 804 that contains some minimal comments on IO regi 805 806 Field D : SOCL Scsi Output Control Latch 807 This register reflects the state of 808 chip want to drive or compare agains 809 Field E : SBCL Scsi Bus Control Lines 810 Actual value of control lines on the 811 Field F : SBDL Scsi Bus Data Lines 812 Actual value of data lines on the SC 813 Field G : SXFER SCSI Transfer 814 Contains the setting of the Synchron 815 the current Synchronous offset (offs 816 Field H : SCNTL3 Scsi Control Register 3 817 Contains the setting of timing value 818 synchronous data transfers. 819 Field I : SCNTL4 Scsi Control Register 4 820 Only meaningful for 53C1010 Ultra3 c 821 822 Understanding Fields J, K, L and dumps require 823 SCSI standards, chip cores functionnals and in 824 You are not required to decode and understand 825 maintain the driver code. 826 827 17. Serial NVRAM (added by Richard Waltham: do 828 ============================================== 829 830 17.1 Features 831 ------------- 832 833 Enabling serial NVRAM support enables detectio 834 on Symbios and some Symbios compatible host ad 835 serial NVRAM is used by Symbios and Tekram to 836 host adaptor and its attached drives. 837 838 The Symbios NVRAM also holds data on the boot 839 system with more than one host adaptor. This 840 as it's fundamentally incompatible with the ho 841 842 Tekram boards using Symbios chips, DC390W/F/U, 843 and this is used to distinguish between Symbio 844 adaptors. This is used to disable the Symbios 845 incorrectly set on Tekram boards if the CONFIG 846 configuration parameter is set enabling both S 847 used together with the Symbios cards using all 848 "diff" support. ("led pin" support for Symbios 849 enabled when using Tekram cards. It does nothi 850 adaptors but does not cause problems either.) 851 852 The parameters the driver is able to get from 853 data format used, as follow: 854 855 +-------------------------------+------------- 856 | |Tekram format 857 +-------------------------------+------------- 858 |General and host parameters | 859 +-------------------------------+------------- 860 | * Boot order | N 861 +-------------------------------+------------- 862 | * Host SCSI ID | Y 863 +-------------------------------+------------- 864 | * SCSI parity checking | Y 865 +-------------------------------+------------- 866 | * Verbose boot messages | N 867 +-------------------------------+------------- 868 |SCSI devices parameters 869 +-------------------------------+------------- 870 | * Synchronous transfer speed | Y 871 +-------------------------------+------------- 872 | * Wide 16 / Narrow | Y 873 +-------------------------------+------------- 874 | * Tagged Command Queuing | Y 875 | enabled | 876 +-------------------------------+------------- 877 | * Disconnections enabled | Y 878 +-------------------------------+------------- 879 | * Scan at boot time | N 880 +-------------------------------+------------- 881 882 883 In order to speed up the system boot, for each 884 the "scan at boot time" option, the driver for 885 first TEST UNIT READY command received for thi 886 887 888 17.2 Symbios NVRAM layout 889 ------------------------- 890 891 typical data at NVRAM address 0x100 (53c810a N 892 893 00 00 894 64 01 895 8e 0b 896 897 00 30 00 00 00 00 07 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 898 899 04 00 0f 00 00 10 00 50 00 00 01 00 00 62 900 04 00 03 00 00 10 00 58 00 00 01 00 00 63 901 04 00 01 00 00 10 00 48 00 00 01 00 00 61 902 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 903 904 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 905 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 906 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 907 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 908 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 909 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 910 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 911 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 912 913 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 914 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 915 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 916 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 917 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 918 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 919 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 920 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 921 922 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 923 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 924 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 925 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 926 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 927 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 928 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 929 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 930 931 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 932 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 933 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 934 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 935 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 936 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 937 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 938 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 939 940 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 941 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 942 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 943 944 fe fe 945 00 00 946 00 00 947 948 NVRAM layout details 949 950 ============= ================= 951 NVRAM Address 952 ============= ================= 953 0x000-0x0ff not used 954 0x100-0x26f initialised data 955 0x270-0x7ff not used 956 ============= ================= 957 958 general layout:: 959 960 header - 6 bytes, 961 data - 356 bytes (checksum is byte 962 trailer - 6 bytes 963 --- 964 total 368 bytes 965 966 data area layout:: 967 968 controller set up - 20 bytes 969 boot configuration - 56 bytes (4x14 b 970 device set up - 128 bytes (16x8 b 971 unused (spare?) - 152 bytes (19x8 b 972 --- 973 total 356 bytes 974 975 header:: 976 977 00 00 - ?? start marker 978 64 01 - byte count (lsb/msb excludes hea 979 8e 0b - checksum (lsb/msb excludes heade 980 981 controller set up:: 982 983 00 30 00 00 00 00 07 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 984 | | | | 985 | | | - 986 | | | 987 | | --Remov 988 | | 0x00 989 | | 0x01 990 | | 0x02 991 | | 992 | --flag bits 2 993 | 0x00000001= scan 994 | (default 0x00 995 --flag bits 1 996 0x00000001 scam enable 997 0x00000010 parity enab 998 0x00000100 verbose boo 999 1000 remaining bytes unknown - they do not appear 1001 current set up for any of the controllers. 1002 1003 default set up is identical for 53c810a and 5 1004 (Removable Media added Symbios BIOS version 4 1005 1006 boot configuration 1007 1008 boot order set by order of the devices in thi 1009 1010 04 00 0f 00 00 10 00 50 00 00 01 00 00 62 1011 04 00 03 00 00 10 00 58 00 00 01 00 00 63 1012 04 00 01 00 00 10 00 48 00 00 01 00 00 61 1013 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 1014 | | | | | | | | 1015 | | | | | | ---- P 1016 | | | | | --0x01 init/ 1017 | | | | --PCI device/function 1018 | | ----- ?? PCI vendor ID (lsb/ms 1019 ----PCI device ID (lsb/msb) 1020 1021 ?? use of this data is a guess but seems reas 1022 1023 remaining bytes unknown - they do not appear 1024 current set up 1025 1026 default set up is identical for 53c810a and 5 1027 1028 device set up (up to 16 devices - includes co 1029 1030 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 - id 0 1031 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1032 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1033 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1034 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1035 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1036 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1037 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1038 1039 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1040 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1041 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1042 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1043 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1044 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1045 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 1046 0f 00 08 08 64 00 0a 00 - id 15 1047 | | | | | | 1048 | | | | ----timeout (lsb/msb) 1049 | | | --synch period (0x?? 40 Mtra 1050 | | | (0x30 20 Mtra 1051 | | | (0x64 10 Mtra 1052 | | | (0xc8 5 Mtra 1053 | | | (0x00 asynch 1054 | | -- ?? max sync offset (0x08 in 1055 | | (0x10 in 1056 | --device bus width (0x08 narrow) 1057 | (0x10 16 bit wi 1058 --flag bits 1059 0x00000001 - disconnect enabled 1060 0x00000010 - scan at boot time 1061 0x00000100 - scan luns 1062 0x00001000 - queue tags enabled 1063 1064 remaining bytes unknown - they do not appear 1065 current set up 1066 1067 ?? use of this data is a guess but seems reas 1068 (but it could be max bus width) 1069 1070 default set up for 53c810a NVRAM 1071 default set up for 53c875 NVRAM 1072 1073 - bus width 1074 - sync offset 1075 - sync period 1076 1077 ?? spare device space (32 bit bus ??):: 1078 1079 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 (19x8bytes) 1080 . 1081 . 1082 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 1083 1084 default set up is identical for 53c810a and 5 1085 1086 trailer:: 1087 1088 fe fe - ? end marker ? 1089 00 00 1090 00 00 1091 1092 default set up is identical for 53c810a and 5 1093 1094 17.3 Tekram NVRAM layout 1095 ------------------------ 1096 1097 nvram 64x16 (1024 bit) 1098 1099 Drive settings:: 1100 1101 Drive ID 0-15 (addr 0x0yyyy0 = device set 1102 (addr 0x0yyyy1 = 0x0000) 1103 1104 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x 1105 | | | | | | | | | 1106 | | | | | | | | ----- 1107 | | | | | | | | 1108 | | | | | | | | 1109 | | | | | | | ------- 1110 | | | | | | | 1111 | | | | | | | 1112 | | | | | | --------- 1113 | | | | | | 1114 | | | | | | 1115 | | | | | ----------- 1116 | | | | | 1117 | | | | | 1118 | | | | -------------- 1119 | | | | 1120 | | | | 1121 | | | ---------------- 1122 | | | 1123 | | | 1124 ------------------------- 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 Global settings 1139 1140 Host flags 0 (addr 0x100000, 32):: 1141 1142 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x 1143 | | | | | | | | | | | | 1144 | | | | | | | | ----------- h 1145 | | | | | | | | 1146 | | | | | | | ----------------------- s 1147 | | | | | | | > 1148 | | | | | | | 1149 | | | | | | ------------------------- s 1150 | | | | | | > 1151 | | | | | | 1152 | | | | | --------------------------- b 1153 | | | | | 1154 | | | | | 1155 | | | | ----------------------------- a 1156 | | | | 1157 | | | | 1158 | | | -------------------------------- i 1159 | | | 1160 | | | 1161 | | ---------------------------------- s 1162 | | 1163 | | 1164 -------------------------------------- r 1165 a 1166 1167 1168 Host flags 1 (addr 0x100001, 33):: 1169 1170 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x 1171 | | | | | | 1172 | | | --------- b 1173 | | | 1174 | | | 1175 | | | 1176 | | | 1177 | | | 1178 | | | 1179 | | | 1180 --------------------------- m 1181 1182 1183 1184 1185 1186 Host flags 2 (addr 0x100010, 34):: 1187 1188 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x 1189 | 1190 ----- F 1191 1192 1193 checksum (addr 0x111111) 1194 1195 checksum = 0x1234 - (sum addr 0-63) 1196 1197 --------------------------------------------- 1198 1199 default nvram data:: 1200 1201 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 1202 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 1203 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 1204 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 0x0037 0x0000 1205 1206 0x0f07 0x0400 0x0001 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 1207 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 1208 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 1209 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
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