From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Nathan Bryant Subject: Re: Suspending SCSI devices and buses Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2004 10:33:46 -0400 Sender: linux-scsi-owner@vger.kernel.org Message-ID: <41260BCA.6000904@optonline.net> References: <4125EEE4.50102@optonline.net> <4125FE3B.7070608@adaptec.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Return-path: Received: from pegasus.allegientsystems.com ([208.251.178.236]:60932 "EHLO pegasus.lawaudit.com") by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S268110AbUHTOdw (ORCPT ); Fri, 20 Aug 2004 10:33:52 -0400 In-Reply-To: <4125FE3B.7070608@adaptec.com> List-Id: linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org To: Luben Tuikov Cc: Alan Stern , SCSI development list Luben Tuikov wrote: > Nathan Bryant wrote: > >> Alan Stern wrote: >> >> >Thanks. Looking at your patch, I have a question. It doesn't look >> like >> >the resume path is careful to check for Unit Attention with Power On or >> >Medium May Have Changed sense. What happens if somebody changes the >> >medium while the drive is suspended? Or am I missing something? >> > >> You're not missing anything. :( >> >> Thanks for the feedback, looks like you've found a real problem with the >> patch: that is, due to the unconditonal spinup call on resume, we clear >> any UNIT ATTENTION state before any of the upper layers ever see it, so >> nobody will notice a possible media change. > > > If UA exists for the initiator port, commands other INQURY, REPORT LUNS > and REPORT SENSE, get terminated and UA reported (CHECK CONDITION with > sense data). So spinup (TUR + START STOP UNIT) could report the media > change (on TUR). > >> >> Unfortunately, I think that the current media change detection code in >> the Linux kernel can not distinguish power-on events from media change >> events. I'm not sure doing so is even possible for SCSI devices. > > > It would really depend on the device (if it kept state over power > failures). > But it is true that the code should be able to handle it. (Also UAs could > be queued by the device server--the code could use this.) > >> (Comments on that?) Proposed solutions: >> >> Approach #1: >> * Continue to do the unconditional spinup, but only for devices that are >> already mounted. >> This may miss some media change events, but if we really can't >> distinguish power-on from media change, maybe that's somebody else's >> problem if the device was already mounted. (Changing mounted media is >> the user's fault.) >> >> (Hmm, what about devices that are opened for read/write but not mounted?) >> >> Approach #2: >> * Test for UNIT_ATTENTION before spinning up and report this as a media >> change. >> Safer, but may report "false positive" media change events if the device >> was only powered down/up. > > > UA can tell you when "removable medium may have changed" (SAM3r13, > 5.9.7, b) > and "LU inventory has been changed" (same, g). The additional sense code for this is 0x28 0x00, or NOT READY TO READY TRANSITION (MEDIUM MAY HAVE CHANGED) The kernel doesn't check for this sense code, currently we interpret all UNIT_ATTENTION states as a media change. Might changing to check the additional sense code regress things for older devices? I see that the 0x28 0x00 code is defined in SCSI-2, but I don't know whether it was defined in SCSI-1. I suspect that some (perhaps many) devices will see a power up as a media load event, for mechanical reasons. Also technically speaking, a not-ready-to-ready state transition could be interpreted to occur every time we spin the device up, no? Well, I don't really use removable SCSI devices anymore, but I have an old 1Gig Jaz drive that I can play with when I find some time, assuming it still works. It used to seem a little flaky, but maybe that was my bus. This device also does an auto-spindown, I think, and it would be interesting to know what status it reports when it spins back up. Nathan > > But it is true -- I can imagine media being changed without the device > knowing it (old enclosure + power off + screw-driver :-) ). > > Luben > > > - > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >