diff options
author | Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com> | 2017-05-12 09:59:02 -0300 |
---|---|---|
committer | Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com> | 2017-05-16 08:44:15 -0300 |
commit | 6020236568bbe99ef3b0f571315255da5d73a531 (patch) | |
tree | 40fc33d6b04e14d38a552c17f8d348fec625a765 /Documentation | |
parent | c7e2154475177a247cd94bf6a8646627a6ae1055 (diff) | |
download | talos-op-linux-6020236568bbe99ef3b0f571315255da5d73a531.tar.gz talos-op-linux-6020236568bbe99ef3b0f571315255da5d73a531.zip |
docs-rst: convert scsi DocBook to ReST
Use pandoc to convert documentation to ReST by calling
Documentation/sphinx/tmplcvt script.
Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/DocBook/Makefile | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/DocBook/scsi.tmpl | 409 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/driver-api/index.rst | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/driver-api/scsi.rst | 344 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/networking/z8530book.rst | 15 |
5 files changed, 352 insertions, 418 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile b/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile index 00a61f4ffcff..3bbda02d6aee 100644 --- a/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile +++ b/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile @@ -9,7 +9,6 @@ DOCBOOKS := \ lsm.xml \ mtdnand.xml librs.xml rapidio.xml \ - scsi.xml \ sh.xml w1.xml ifeq ($(DOCBOOKS),) diff --git a/Documentation/DocBook/scsi.tmpl b/Documentation/DocBook/scsi.tmpl deleted file mode 100644 index 4b9b9b286cea..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/DocBook/scsi.tmpl +++ /dev/null @@ -1,409 +0,0 @@ -<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> -<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" - "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" []> - -<book id="scsimid"> - <bookinfo> - <title>SCSI Interfaces Guide</title> - - <authorgroup> - <author> - <firstname>James</firstname> - <surname>Bottomley</surname> - <affiliation> - <address> - <email>James.Bottomley@hansenpartnership.com</email> - </address> - </affiliation> - </author> - - <author> - <firstname>Rob</firstname> - <surname>Landley</surname> - <affiliation> - <address> - <email>rob@landley.net</email> - </address> - </affiliation> - </author> - - </authorgroup> - - <copyright> - <year>2007</year> - <holder>Linux Foundation</holder> - </copyright> - - <legalnotice> - <para> - This documentation is free software; you can redistribute - it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public - License version 2. - </para> - - <para> - This program is distributed in the hope that it will be - useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied - warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. - For more details see the file COPYING in the source - distribution of Linux. - </para> - </legalnotice> - </bookinfo> - - <toc></toc> - - <chapter id="intro"> - <title>Introduction</title> - <sect1 id="protocol_vs_bus"> - <title>Protocol vs bus</title> - <para> - Once upon a time, the Small Computer Systems Interface defined both - a parallel I/O bus and a data protocol to connect a wide variety of - peripherals (disk drives, tape drives, modems, printers, scanners, - optical drives, test equipment, and medical devices) to a host - computer. - </para> - <para> - Although the old parallel (fast/wide/ultra) SCSI bus has largely - fallen out of use, the SCSI command set is more widely used than ever - to communicate with devices over a number of different busses. - </para> - <para> - The <ulink url='http://www.t10.org/scsi-3.htm'>SCSI protocol</ulink> - is a big-endian peer-to-peer packet based protocol. SCSI commands - are 6, 10, 12, or 16 bytes long, often followed by an associated data - payload. - </para> - <para> - SCSI commands can be transported over just about any kind of bus, and - are the default protocol for storage devices attached to USB, SATA, - SAS, Fibre Channel, FireWire, and ATAPI devices. SCSI packets are - also commonly exchanged over Infiniband, - <ulink url='http://i2o.shadowconnect.com/faq.php'>I20</ulink>, TCP/IP - (<ulink url='https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISCSI'>iSCSI</ulink>), even - <ulink url='http://cyberelk.net/tim/parport/parscsi.html'>Parallel - ports</ulink>. - </para> - </sect1> - <sect1 id="subsystem_design"> - <title>Design of the Linux SCSI subsystem</title> - <para> - The SCSI subsystem uses a three layer design, with upper, mid, and low - layers. Every operation involving the SCSI subsystem (such as reading - a sector from a disk) uses one driver at each of the 3 levels: one - upper layer driver, one lower layer driver, and the SCSI midlayer. - </para> - <para> - The SCSI upper layer provides the interface between userspace and the - kernel, in the form of block and char device nodes for I/O and - ioctl(). The SCSI lower layer contains drivers for specific hardware - devices. - </para> - <para> - In between is the SCSI mid-layer, analogous to a network routing - layer such as the IPv4 stack. The SCSI mid-layer routes a packet - based data protocol between the upper layer's /dev nodes and the - corresponding devices in the lower layer. It manages command queues, - provides error handling and power management functions, and responds - to ioctl() requests. - </para> - </sect1> - </chapter> - - <chapter id="upper_layer"> - <title>SCSI upper layer</title> - <para> - The upper layer supports the user-kernel interface by providing - device nodes. - </para> - <sect1 id="sd"> - <title>sd (SCSI Disk)</title> - <para>sd (sd_mod.o)</para> -<!-- !Idrivers/scsi/sd.c --> - </sect1> - <sect1 id="sr"> - <title>sr (SCSI CD-ROM)</title> - <para>sr (sr_mod.o)</para> - </sect1> - <sect1 id="st"> - <title>st (SCSI Tape)</title> - <para>st (st.o)</para> - </sect1> - <sect1 id="sg"> - <title>sg (SCSI Generic)</title> - <para>sg (sg.o)</para> - </sect1> - <sect1 id="ch"> - <title>ch (SCSI Media Changer)</title> - <para>ch (ch.c)</para> - </sect1> - </chapter> - - <chapter id="mid_layer"> - <title>SCSI mid layer</title> - - <sect1 id="midlayer_implementation"> - <title>SCSI midlayer implementation</title> - <sect2 id="scsi_device.h"> - <title>include/scsi/scsi_device.h</title> - <para> - </para> -!Iinclude/scsi/scsi_device.h - </sect2> - - <sect2 id="scsi.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi.c</title> - <para>Main file for the SCSI midlayer.</para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsicam.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsicam.c</title> - <para> - <ulink url='http://www.t10.org/ftp/t10/drafts/cam/cam-r12b.pdf'>SCSI - Common Access Method</ulink> support functions, for use with - HDIO_GETGEO, etc. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsicam.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_error.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_error.c</title> - <para>Common SCSI error/timeout handling routines.</para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_error.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_devinfo.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_devinfo.c</title> - <para> - Manage scsi_dev_info_list, which tracks blacklisted and whitelisted - devices. - </para> -!Idrivers/scsi/scsi_devinfo.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_ioctl.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_ioctl.c</title> - <para> - Handle ioctl() calls for SCSI devices. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_ioctl.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_lib.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_lib.c</title> - <para> - SCSI queuing library. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_lib.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_lib_dma.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_lib_dma.c</title> - <para> - SCSI library functions depending on DMA - (map and unmap scatter-gather lists). - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_lib_dma.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_module.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_module.c</title> - <para> - The file drivers/scsi/scsi_module.c contains legacy support for - old-style host templates. It should never be used by any new driver. - </para> - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_proc.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_proc.c</title> - <para> - The functions in this file provide an interface between - the PROC file system and the SCSI device drivers - It is mainly used for debugging, statistics and to pass - information directly to the lowlevel driver. - - I.E. plumbing to manage /proc/scsi/* - </para> -!Idrivers/scsi/scsi_proc.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_netlink.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_netlink.c</title> - <para> - Infrastructure to provide async events from transports to userspace - via netlink, using a single NETLINK_SCSITRANSPORT protocol for all - transports. - - See <ulink url='http://marc.info/?l=linux-scsi&m=115507374832500&w=2'>the - original patch submission</ulink> for more details. - </para> -!Idrivers/scsi/scsi_netlink.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_scan.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_scan.c</title> - <para> - Scan a host to determine which (if any) devices are attached. - - The general scanning/probing algorithm is as follows, exceptions are - made to it depending on device specific flags, compilation options, - and global variable (boot or module load time) settings. - - A specific LUN is scanned via an INQUIRY command; if the LUN has a - device attached, a scsi_device is allocated and setup for it. - - For every id of every channel on the given host, start by scanning - LUN 0. Skip hosts that don't respond at all to a scan of LUN 0. - Otherwise, if LUN 0 has a device attached, allocate and setup a - scsi_device for it. If target is SCSI-3 or up, issue a REPORT LUN, - and scan all of the LUNs returned by the REPORT LUN; else, - sequentially scan LUNs up until some maximum is reached, or a LUN is - seen that cannot have a device attached to it. - </para> -!Idrivers/scsi/scsi_scan.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_sysctl.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_sysctl.c</title> - <para> - Set up the sysctl entry: "/dev/scsi/logging_level" - (DEV_SCSI_LOGGING_LEVEL) which sets/returns scsi_logging_level. - </para> - </sect2> - <sect2 id="scsi_sysfs.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/scsi_sysfs.c</title> - <para> - SCSI sysfs interface routines. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_sysfs.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="hosts.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/hosts.c</title> - <para> - mid to lowlevel SCSI driver interface - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/hosts.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="constants.c"> - <title>drivers/scsi/constants.c</title> - <para> - mid to lowlevel SCSI driver interface - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/constants.c - </sect2> - </sect1> - - <sect1 id="Transport_classes"> - <title>Transport classes</title> - <para> - Transport classes are service libraries for drivers in the SCSI - lower layer, which expose transport attributes in sysfs. - </para> - <sect2 id="Fibre_Channel_transport"> - <title>Fibre Channel transport</title> - <para> - The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_fc.c defines transport attributes - for Fibre Channel. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_transport_fc.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="iSCSI_transport"> - <title>iSCSI transport class</title> - <para> - The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_iscsi.c defines transport - attributes for the iSCSI class, which sends SCSI packets over TCP/IP - connections. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_transport_iscsi.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="SAS_transport"> - <title>Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) transport class</title> - <para> - The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_sas.c defines transport - attributes for Serial Attached SCSI, a variant of SATA aimed at - large high-end systems. - </para> - <para> - The SAS transport class contains common code to deal with SAS HBAs, - an aproximated representation of SAS topologies in the driver model, - and various sysfs attributes to expose these topologies and management - interfaces to userspace. - </para> - <para> - In addition to the basic SCSI core objects this transport class - introduces two additional intermediate objects: The SAS PHY - as represented by struct sas_phy defines an "outgoing" PHY on - a SAS HBA or Expander, and the SAS remote PHY represented by - struct sas_rphy defines an "incoming" PHY on a SAS Expander or - end device. Note that this is purely a software concept, the - underlying hardware for a PHY and a remote PHY is the exactly - the same. - </para> - <para> - There is no concept of a SAS port in this code, users can see - what PHYs form a wide port based on the port_identifier attribute, - which is the same for all PHYs in a port. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_transport_sas.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="SATA_transport"> - <title>SATA transport class</title> - <para> - The SATA transport is handled by libata, which has its own book of - documentation in this directory. - </para> - </sect2> - <sect2 id="SPI_transport"> - <title>Parallel SCSI (SPI) transport class</title> - <para> - The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_spi.c defines transport - attributes for traditional (fast/wide/ultra) SCSI busses. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_transport_spi.c - </sect2> - <sect2 id="SRP_transport"> - <title>SCSI RDMA (SRP) transport class</title> - <para> - The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_srp.c defines transport - attributes for SCSI over Remote Direct Memory Access. - </para> -!Edrivers/scsi/scsi_transport_srp.c - </sect2> - </sect1> - - </chapter> - - <chapter id="lower_layer"> - <title>SCSI lower layer</title> - <sect1 id="hba_drivers"> - <title>Host Bus Adapter transport types</title> - <para> - Many modern device controllers use the SCSI command set as a protocol to - communicate with their devices through many different types of physical - connections. - </para> - <para> - In SCSI language a bus capable of carrying SCSI commands is - called a "transport", and a controller connecting to such a bus is - called a "host bus adapter" (HBA). - </para> - <sect2 id="scsi_debug.c"> - <title>Debug transport</title> - <para> - The file drivers/scsi/scsi_debug.c simulates a host adapter with a - variable number of disks (or disk like devices) attached, sharing a - common amount of RAM. Does a lot of checking to make sure that we are - not getting blocks mixed up, and panics the kernel if anything out of - the ordinary is seen. - </para> - <para> - To be more realistic, the simulated devices have the transport - attributes of SAS disks. - </para> - <para> - For documentation see - <ulink url='http://sg.danny.cz/sg/sdebug26.html'>http://sg.danny.cz/sg/sdebug26.html</ulink> - </para> -<!-- !Edrivers/scsi/scsi_debug.c --> - </sect2> - <sect2 id="todo"> - <title>todo</title> - <para>Parallel (fast/wide/ultra) SCSI, USB, SATA, - SAS, Fibre Channel, FireWire, ATAPI devices, Infiniband, - I20, iSCSI, Parallel ports, netlink... - </para> - </sect2> - </sect1> - </chapter> -</book> diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/index.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/index.rst index a9687731810e..9589b06e374e 100644 --- a/Documentation/driver-api/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/index.rst @@ -32,6 +32,7 @@ available subsections can be seen below. i2c hsi edac + scsi libata miscellaneous s390-drivers diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/scsi.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/scsi.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..859fb672319f --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/scsi.rst @@ -0,0 +1,344 @@ +===================== +SCSI Interfaces Guide +===================== + +:Author: James Bottomley +:Author: Rob Landley + +Introduction +============ + +Protocol vs bus +--------------- + +Once upon a time, the Small Computer Systems Interface defined both a +parallel I/O bus and a data protocol to connect a wide variety of +peripherals (disk drives, tape drives, modems, printers, scanners, +optical drives, test equipment, and medical devices) to a host computer. + +Although the old parallel (fast/wide/ultra) SCSI bus has largely fallen +out of use, the SCSI command set is more widely used than ever to +communicate with devices over a number of different busses. + +The `SCSI protocol <http://www.t10.org/scsi-3.htm>`__ is a big-endian +peer-to-peer packet based protocol. SCSI commands are 6, 10, 12, or 16 +bytes long, often followed by an associated data payload. + +SCSI commands can be transported over just about any kind of bus, and +are the default protocol for storage devices attached to USB, SATA, SAS, +Fibre Channel, FireWire, and ATAPI devices. SCSI packets are also +commonly exchanged over Infiniband, +`I20 <http://i2o.shadowconnect.com/faq.php>`__, TCP/IP +(`iSCSI <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISCSI>`__), even `Parallel +ports <http://cyberelk.net/tim/parport/parscsi.html>`__. + +Design of the Linux SCSI subsystem +---------------------------------- + +The SCSI subsystem uses a three layer design, with upper, mid, and low +layers. Every operation involving the SCSI subsystem (such as reading a +sector from a disk) uses one driver at each of the 3 levels: one upper +layer driver, one lower layer driver, and the SCSI midlayer. + +The SCSI upper layer provides the interface between userspace and the +kernel, in the form of block and char device nodes for I/O and ioctl(). +The SCSI lower layer contains drivers for specific hardware devices. + +In between is the SCSI mid-layer, analogous to a network routing layer +such as the IPv4 stack. The SCSI mid-layer routes a packet based data +protocol between the upper layer's /dev nodes and the corresponding +devices in the lower layer. It manages command queues, provides error +handling and power management functions, and responds to ioctl() +requests. + +SCSI upper layer +================ + +The upper layer supports the user-kernel interface by providing device +nodes. + +sd (SCSI Disk) +-------------- + +sd (sd_mod.o) + +sr (SCSI CD-ROM) +---------------- + +sr (sr_mod.o) + +st (SCSI Tape) +-------------- + +st (st.o) + +sg (SCSI Generic) +----------------- + +sg (sg.o) + +ch (SCSI Media Changer) +----------------------- + +ch (ch.c) + +SCSI mid layer +============== + +SCSI midlayer implementation +---------------------------- + +include/scsi/scsi_device.h +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +.. kernel-doc:: include/scsi/scsi_device.h + :internal: + +drivers/scsi/scsi.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Main file for the SCSI midlayer. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi.c + :export: + +drivers/scsi/scsicam.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +`SCSI Common Access +Method <http://www.t10.org/ftp/t10/drafts/cam/cam-r12b.pdf>`__ support +functions, for use with HDIO_GETGEO, etc. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsicam.c + :export: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_error.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Common SCSI error/timeout handling routines. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_error.c + :export: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_devinfo.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Manage scsi_dev_info_list, which tracks blacklisted and whitelisted +devices. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_devinfo.c + :internal: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_ioctl.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Handle ioctl() calls for SCSI devices. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_ioctl.c + :export: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_lib.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +SCSI queuing library. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_lib.c + :export: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_lib_dma.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +SCSI library functions depending on DMA (map and unmap scatter-gather +lists). + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_lib_dma.c + :export: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_module.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The file drivers/scsi/scsi_module.c contains legacy support for +old-style host templates. It should never be used by any new driver. + +drivers/scsi/scsi_proc.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The functions in this file provide an interface between the PROC file +system and the SCSI device drivers It is mainly used for debugging, +statistics and to pass information directly to the lowlevel driver. I.E. +plumbing to manage /proc/scsi/\* + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_proc.c + :internal: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_netlink.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Infrastructure to provide async events from transports to userspace via +netlink, using a single NETLINK_SCSITRANSPORT protocol for all +transports. See `the original patch +submission <http://marc.info/?l=linux-scsi&m=115507374832500&w=2>`__ for +more details. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_netlink.c + :internal: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_scan.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Scan a host to determine which (if any) devices are attached. The +general scanning/probing algorithm is as follows, exceptions are made to +it depending on device specific flags, compilation options, and global +variable (boot or module load time) settings. A specific LUN is scanned +via an INQUIRY command; if the LUN has a device attached, a scsi_device +is allocated and setup for it. For every id of every channel on the +given host, start by scanning LUN 0. Skip hosts that don't respond at +all to a scan of LUN 0. Otherwise, if LUN 0 has a device attached, +allocate and setup a scsi_device for it. If target is SCSI-3 or up, +issue a REPORT LUN, and scan all of the LUNs returned by the REPORT LUN; +else, sequentially scan LUNs up until some maximum is reached, or a LUN +is seen that cannot have a device attached to it. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_scan.c + :internal: + +drivers/scsi/scsi_sysctl.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Set up the sysctl entry: "/dev/scsi/logging_level" +(DEV_SCSI_LOGGING_LEVEL) which sets/returns scsi_logging_level. + +drivers/scsi/scsi_sysfs.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +SCSI sysfs interface routines. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_sysfs.c + :export: + +drivers/scsi/hosts.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +mid to lowlevel SCSI driver interface + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/hosts.c + :export: + +drivers/scsi/constants.c +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +mid to lowlevel SCSI driver interface + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/constants.c + :export: + +Transport classes +----------------- + +Transport classes are service libraries for drivers in the SCSI lower +layer, which expose transport attributes in sysfs. + +Fibre Channel transport +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_fc.c defines transport attributes +for Fibre Channel. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_fc.c + :export: + +iSCSI transport class +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_iscsi.c defines transport +attributes for the iSCSI class, which sends SCSI packets over TCP/IP +connections. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_iscsi.c + :export: + +Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) transport class +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_sas.c defines transport +attributes for Serial Attached SCSI, a variant of SATA aimed at large +high-end systems. + +The SAS transport class contains common code to deal with SAS HBAs, an +aproximated representation of SAS topologies in the driver model, and +various sysfs attributes to expose these topologies and management +interfaces to userspace. + +In addition to the basic SCSI core objects this transport class +introduces two additional intermediate objects: The SAS PHY as +represented by struct sas_phy defines an "outgoing" PHY on a SAS HBA or +Expander, and the SAS remote PHY represented by struct sas_rphy defines +an "incoming" PHY on a SAS Expander or end device. Note that this is +purely a software concept, the underlying hardware for a PHY and a +remote PHY is the exactly the same. + +There is no concept of a SAS port in this code, users can see what PHYs +form a wide port based on the port_identifier attribute, which is the +same for all PHYs in a port. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_sas.c + :export: + +SATA transport class +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The SATA transport is handled by libata, which has its own book of +documentation in this directory. + +Parallel SCSI (SPI) transport class +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_spi.c defines transport +attributes for traditional (fast/wide/ultra) SCSI busses. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_spi.c + :export: + +SCSI RDMA (SRP) transport class +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The file drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_srp.c defines transport +attributes for SCSI over Remote Direct Memory Access. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/scsi/scsi_transport_srp.c + :export: + +SCSI lower layer +================ + +Host Bus Adapter transport types +-------------------------------- + +Many modern device controllers use the SCSI command set as a protocol to +communicate with their devices through many different types of physical +connections. + +In SCSI language a bus capable of carrying SCSI commands is called a +"transport", and a controller connecting to such a bus is called a "host +bus adapter" (HBA). + +Debug transport +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The file drivers/scsi/scsi_debug.c simulates a host adapter with a +variable number of disks (or disk like devices) attached, sharing a +common amount of RAM. Does a lot of checking to make sure that we are +not getting blocks mixed up, and panics the kernel if anything out of +the ordinary is seen. + +To be more realistic, the simulated devices have the transport +attributes of SAS disks. + +For documentation see http://sg.danny.cz/sg/sdebug26.html + +todo +~~~~ + +Parallel (fast/wide/ultra) SCSI, USB, SATA, SAS, Fibre Channel, +FireWire, ATAPI devices, Infiniband, I20, iSCSI, Parallel ports, +netlink... diff --git a/Documentation/networking/z8530book.rst b/Documentation/networking/z8530book.rst index 31032ee36081..fea2c40e7973 100644 --- a/Documentation/networking/z8530book.rst +++ b/Documentation/networking/z8530book.rst @@ -170,10 +170,10 @@ This function is very timing critical. When you wish to simply discard data the support code provides the function :c:func:`z8530_null_rx()` to discard the data. -To active PIO mode sending and receiving the `` - z8530_sync_open`` is called. This expects to be passed the network -device and the channel. Typically this is called from your network -device open callback. On a failure a non zero error status is returned. +To active PIO mode sending and receiving the ``z8530_sync_open`` is called. +This expects to be passed the network device and the channel. Typically +this is called from your network device open callback. On a failure a +non zero error status is returned. The :c:func:`z8530_sync_close()` function shuts down a PIO channel. This must be done before the channel is opened again and before the driver shuts down and unloads. @@ -190,8 +190,7 @@ the close function matching the open mode you used. The final supported mode uses a single DMA channel to drive the transmit side. As the Z85C30 has a larger FIFO on the receive channel this tends to increase the maximum speed a little. This is activated by calling the -``z8530_sync_txdma_open - ``. This returns a non zero error code on failure. The +``z8530_sync_txdma_open``. This returns a non zero error code on failure. The :c:func:`z8530_sync_txdma_close()` function closes down the Z8530 interface from this mode. @@ -228,8 +227,8 @@ Should you need to retarget the Z8530 driver to another architecture the only code that should need changing are the port I/O functions. At the moment these assume PC I/O port accesses. This may not be appropriate for all platforms. Replacing :c:func:`z8530_read_port()` and -``z8530_write_port - `` is intended to be all that is required to port this driver layer. +``z8530_write_port`` is intended to be all that is required to port +this driver layer. Known Bugs And Assumptions ========================== |