1 /* Driver for USB Mass Storage compliant devices 2 * SCSI layer glue code 3 * 4 * Current development and maintenance by: 5 * (c) 1999-2002 Matthew Dharm (mdharm-usb@one-eyed-alien.net) 6 * 7 * Developed with the assistance of: 8 * (c) 2000 David L. Brown, Jr. (usb-storage@davidb.org) 9 * (c) 2000 Stephen J. Gowdy (SGowdy@lbl.gov) 10 * 11 * Initial work by: 12 * (c) 1999 Michael Gee (michael@linuxspecific.com) 13 * 14 * This driver is based on the 'USB Mass Storage Class' document. This 15 * describes in detail the protocol used to communicate with such 16 * devices. Clearly, the designers had SCSI and ATAPI commands in 17 * mind when they created this document. The commands are all very 18 * similar to commands in the SCSI-II and ATAPI specifications. 19 * 20 * It is important to note that in a number of cases this class 21 * exhibits class-specific exemptions from the USB specification. 22 * Notably the usage of NAK, STALL and ACK differs from the norm, in 23 * that they are used to communicate wait, failed and OK on commands. 24 * 25 * Also, for certain devices, the interrupt endpoint is used to convey 26 * status of a command. 27 * 28 * Please see http://www.one-eyed-alien.net/~mdharm/linux-usb for more 29 * information about this driver. 30 * 31 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it 32 * under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the 33 * Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any 34 * later version. 35 * 36 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but 37 * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 38 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU 39 * General Public License for more details. 40 * 41 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along 42 * with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 43 * 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. 44 */ 45 46 #include <linux/slab.h> 47 #include <linux/module.h> 48 #include <linux/mutex.h> 49 50 #include <scsi/scsi.h> 51 #include <scsi/scsi_cmnd.h> 52 #include <scsi/scsi_devinfo.h> 53 #include <scsi/scsi_device.h> 54 #include <scsi/scsi_eh.h> 55 56 #include "usb.h" 57 #include "scsiglue.h" 58 #include "debug.h" 59 #include "transport.h" 60 #include "protocol.h" 61 62 /*********************************************************************** 63 * Host functions 64 ***********************************************************************/ 65 66 static const char* host_info(struct Scsi_Host *host) 67 { 68 return "SCSI emulation for USB Mass Storage devices"; 69 } 70 71 static int slave_alloc (struct scsi_device *sdev) 72 { 73 struct us_data *us = host_to_us(sdev->host); 74 75 /* 76 * Set the INQUIRY transfer length to 36. We don't use any of 77 * the extra data and many devices choke if asked for more or 78 * less than 36 bytes. 79 */ 80 sdev->inquiry_len = 36; 81 82 /* USB has unusual DMA-alignment requirements: Although the 83 * starting address of each scatter-gather element doesn't matter, 84 * the length of each element except the last must be divisible 85 * by the Bulk maxpacket value. There's currently no way to 86 * express this by block-layer constraints, so we'll cop out 87 * and simply require addresses to be aligned at 512-byte 88 * boundaries. This is okay since most block I/O involves 89 * hardware sectors that are multiples of 512 bytes in length, 90 * and since host controllers up through USB 2.0 have maxpacket 91 * values no larger than 512. 92 * 93 * But it doesn't suffice for Wireless USB, where Bulk maxpacket 94 * values can be as large as 2048. To make that work properly 95 * will require changes to the block layer. 96 */ 97 blk_queue_update_dma_alignment(sdev->request_queue, (512 - 1)); 98 99 /* 100 * The UFI spec treates the Peripheral Qualifier bits in an 101 * INQUIRY result as reserved and requires devices to set them 102 * to 0. However the SCSI spec requires these bits to be set 103 * to 3 to indicate when a LUN is not present. 104 * 105 * Let the scanning code know if this target merely sets 106 * Peripheral Device Type to 0x1f to indicate no LUN. 107 */ 108 if (us->subclass == US_SC_UFI) 109 sdev->sdev_target->pdt_1f_for_no_lun = 1; 110 111 return 0; 112 } 113 114 static int slave_configure(struct scsi_device *sdev) 115 { 116 struct us_data *us = host_to_us(sdev->host); 117 118 /* Many devices have trouble transfering more than 32KB at a time, 119 * while others have trouble with more than 64K. At this time we 120 * are limiting both to 32K (64 sectores). 121 */ 122 if (us->fflags & (US_FL_MAX_SECTORS_64 | US_FL_MAX_SECTORS_MIN)) { 123 unsigned int max_sectors = 64; 124 125 if (us->fflags & US_FL_MAX_SECTORS_MIN) 126 max_sectors = PAGE_CACHE_SIZE >> 9; 127 if (sdev->request_queue->max_sectors > max_sectors) 128 blk_queue_max_sectors(sdev->request_queue, 129 max_sectors); 130 } 131 132 /* We can't put these settings in slave_alloc() because that gets 133 * called before the device type is known. Consequently these 134 * settings can't be overridden via the scsi devinfo mechanism. */ 135 if (sdev->type == TYPE_DISK) { 136 137 /* Disk-type devices use MODE SENSE(6) if the protocol 138 * (SubClass) is Transparent SCSI, otherwise they use 139 * MODE SENSE(10). */ 140 if (us->subclass != US_SC_SCSI && us->subclass != US_SC_CYP_ATACB) 141 sdev->use_10_for_ms = 1; 142 143 /* Many disks only accept MODE SENSE transfer lengths of 144 * 192 bytes (that's what Windows uses). */ 145 sdev->use_192_bytes_for_3f = 1; 146 147 /* Some devices don't like MODE SENSE with page=0x3f, 148 * which is the command used for checking if a device 149 * is write-protected. Now that we tell the sd driver 150 * to do a 192-byte transfer with this command the 151 * majority of devices work fine, but a few still can't 152 * handle it. The sd driver will simply assume those 153 * devices are write-enabled. */ 154 if (us->fflags & US_FL_NO_WP_DETECT) 155 sdev->skip_ms_page_3f = 1; 156 157 /* A number of devices have problems with MODE SENSE for 158 * page x08, so we will skip it. */ 159 sdev->skip_ms_page_8 = 1; 160 161 /* Some disks return the total number of blocks in response 162 * to READ CAPACITY rather than the highest block number. 163 * If this device makes that mistake, tell the sd driver. */ 164 if (us->fflags & US_FL_FIX_CAPACITY) 165 sdev->fix_capacity = 1; 166 167 /* A few disks have two indistinguishable version, one of 168 * which reports the correct capacity and the other does not. 169 * The sd driver has to guess which is the case. */ 170 if (us->fflags & US_FL_CAPACITY_HEURISTICS) 171 sdev->guess_capacity = 1; 172 173 /* Some devices report a SCSI revision level above 2 but are 174 * unable to handle the REPORT LUNS command (for which 175 * support is mandatory at level 3). Since we already have 176 * a Get-Max-LUN request, we won't lose much by setting the 177 * revision level down to 2. The only devices that would be 178 * affected are those with sparse LUNs. */ 179 if (sdev->scsi_level > SCSI_2) 180 sdev->sdev_target->scsi_level = 181 sdev->scsi_level = SCSI_2; 182 183 /* USB-IDE bridges tend to report SK = 0x04 (Non-recoverable 184 * Hardware Error) when any low-level error occurs, 185 * recoverable or not. Setting this flag tells the SCSI 186 * midlayer to retry such commands, which frequently will 187 * succeed and fix the error. The worst this can lead to 188 * is an occasional series of retries that will all fail. */ 189 sdev->retry_hwerror = 1; 190 191 /* USB disks should allow restart. Some drives spin down 192 * automatically, requiring a START-STOP UNIT command. */ 193 sdev->allow_restart = 1; 194 195 /* Some USB cardreaders have trouble reading an sdcard's last 196 * sector in a larger then 1 sector read, since the performance 197 * impact is negible we set this flag for all USB disks */ 198 sdev->last_sector_bug = 1; 199 } else { 200 201 /* Non-disk-type devices don't need to blacklist any pages 202 * or to force 192-byte transfer lengths for MODE SENSE. 203 * But they do need to use MODE SENSE(10). */ 204 sdev->use_10_for_ms = 1; 205 } 206 207 /* The CB and CBI transports have no way to pass LUN values 208 * other than the bits in the second byte of a CDB. But those 209 * bits don't get set to the LUN value if the device reports 210 * scsi_level == 0 (UNKNOWN). Hence such devices must necessarily 211 * be single-LUN. 212 */ 213 if ((us->protocol == US_PR_CB || us->protocol == US_PR_CBI) && 214 sdev->scsi_level == SCSI_UNKNOWN) 215 us->max_lun = 0; 216 217 /* Some devices choke when they receive a PREVENT-ALLOW MEDIUM 218 * REMOVAL command, so suppress those commands. */ 219 if (us->fflags & US_FL_NOT_LOCKABLE) 220 sdev->lockable = 0; 221 222 /* this is to satisfy the compiler, tho I don't think the 223 * return code is ever checked anywhere. */ 224 return 0; 225 } 226 227 /* queue a command */ 228 /* This is always called with scsi_lock(host) held */ 229 static int queuecommand(struct scsi_cmnd *srb, 230 void (*done)(struct scsi_cmnd *)) 231 { 232 struct us_data *us = host_to_us(srb->device->host); 233 234 US_DEBUGP("%s called\n", __func__); 235 236 /* check for state-transition errors */ 237 if (us->srb != NULL) { 238 printk(KERN_ERR USB_STORAGE "Error in %s: us->srb = %p\n", 239 __func__, us->srb); 240 return SCSI_MLQUEUE_HOST_BUSY; 241 } 242 243 /* fail the command if we are disconnecting */ 244 if (test_bit(US_FLIDX_DISCONNECTING, &us->dflags)) { 245 US_DEBUGP("Fail command during disconnect\n"); 246 srb->result = DID_NO_CONNECT << 16; 247 done(srb); 248 return 0; 249 } 250 251 /* enqueue the command and wake up the control thread */ 252 srb->scsi_done = done; 253 us->srb = srb; 254 complete(&us->cmnd_ready); 255 256 return 0; 257 } 258 259 /*********************************************************************** 260 * Error handling functions 261 ***********************************************************************/ 262 263 /* Command timeout and abort */ 264 static int command_abort(struct scsi_cmnd *srb) 265 { 266 struct us_data *us = host_to_us(srb->device->host); 267 268 US_DEBUGP("%s called\n", __func__); 269 270 /* us->srb together with the TIMED_OUT, RESETTING, and ABORTING 271 * bits are protected by the host lock. */ 272 scsi_lock(us_to_host(us)); 273 274 /* Is this command still active? */ 275 if (us->srb != srb) { 276 scsi_unlock(us_to_host(us)); 277 US_DEBUGP ("-- nothing to abort\n"); 278 return FAILED; 279 } 280 281 /* Set the TIMED_OUT bit. Also set the ABORTING bit, but only if 282 * a device reset isn't already in progress (to avoid interfering 283 * with the reset). Note that we must retain the host lock while 284 * calling usb_stor_stop_transport(); otherwise it might interfere 285 * with an auto-reset that begins as soon as we release the lock. */ 286 set_bit(US_FLIDX_TIMED_OUT, &us->dflags); 287 if (!test_bit(US_FLIDX_RESETTING, &us->dflags)) { 288 set_bit(US_FLIDX_ABORTING, &us->dflags); 289 usb_stor_stop_transport(us); 290 } 291 scsi_unlock(us_to_host(us)); 292 293 /* Wait for the aborted command to finish */ 294 wait_for_completion(&us->notify); 295 return SUCCESS; 296 } 297 298 /* This invokes the transport reset mechanism to reset the state of the 299 * device */ 300 static int device_reset(struct scsi_cmnd *srb) 301 { 302 struct us_data *us = host_to_us(srb->device->host); 303 int result; 304 305 US_DEBUGP("%s called\n", __func__); 306 307 /* lock the device pointers and do the reset */ 308 mutex_lock(&(us->dev_mutex)); 309 result = us->transport_reset(us); 310 mutex_unlock(&us->dev_mutex); 311 312 return result < 0 ? FAILED : SUCCESS; 313 } 314 315 /* Simulate a SCSI bus reset by resetting the device's USB port. */ 316 static int bus_reset(struct scsi_cmnd *srb) 317 { 318 struct us_data *us = host_to_us(srb->device->host); 319 int result; 320 321 US_DEBUGP("%s called\n", __func__); 322 result = usb_stor_port_reset(us); 323 return result < 0 ? FAILED : SUCCESS; 324 } 325 326 /* Report a driver-initiated device reset to the SCSI layer. 327 * Calling this for a SCSI-initiated reset is unnecessary but harmless. 328 * The caller must own the SCSI host lock. */ 329 void usb_stor_report_device_reset(struct us_data *us) 330 { 331 int i; 332 struct Scsi_Host *host = us_to_host(us); 333 334 scsi_report_device_reset(host, 0, 0); 335 if (us->fflags & US_FL_SCM_MULT_TARG) { 336 for (i = 1; i < host->max_id; ++i) 337 scsi_report_device_reset(host, 0, i); 338 } 339 } 340 341 /* Report a driver-initiated bus reset to the SCSI layer. 342 * Calling this for a SCSI-initiated reset is unnecessary but harmless. 343 * The caller must not own the SCSI host lock. */ 344 void usb_stor_report_bus_reset(struct us_data *us) 345 { 346 struct Scsi_Host *host = us_to_host(us); 347 348 scsi_lock(host); 349 scsi_report_bus_reset(host, 0); 350 scsi_unlock(host); 351 } 352 353 /*********************************************************************** 354 * /proc/scsi/ functions 355 ***********************************************************************/ 356 357 /* we use this macro to help us write into the buffer */ 358 #undef SPRINTF 359 #define SPRINTF(args...) \ 360 do { if (pos < buffer+length) pos += sprintf(pos, ## args); } while (0) 361 362 static int proc_info (struct Scsi_Host *host, char *buffer, 363 char **start, off_t offset, int length, int inout) 364 { 365 struct us_data *us = host_to_us(host); 366 char *pos = buffer; 367 const char *string; 368 369 /* if someone is sending us data, just throw it away */ 370 if (inout) 371 return length; 372 373 /* print the controller name */ 374 SPRINTF(" Host scsi%d: usb-storage\n", host->host_no); 375 376 /* print product, vendor, and serial number strings */ 377 if (us->pusb_dev->manufacturer) 378 string = us->pusb_dev->manufacturer; 379 else if (us->unusual_dev->vendorName) 380 string = us->unusual_dev->vendorName; 381 else 382 string = "Unknown"; 383 SPRINTF(" Vendor: %s\n", string); 384 if (us->pusb_dev->product) 385 string = us->pusb_dev->product; 386 else if (us->unusual_dev->productName) 387 string = us->unusual_dev->productName; 388 else 389 string = "Unknown"; 390 SPRINTF(" Product: %s\n", string); 391 if (us->pusb_dev->serial) 392 string = us->pusb_dev->serial; 393 else 394 string = "None"; 395 SPRINTF("Serial Number: %s\n", string); 396 397 /* show the protocol and transport */ 398 SPRINTF(" Protocol: %s\n", us->protocol_name); 399 SPRINTF(" Transport: %s\n", us->transport_name); 400 401 /* show the device flags */ 402 if (pos < buffer + length) { 403 pos += sprintf(pos, " Quirks:"); 404 405 #define US_FLAG(name, value) \ 406 if (us->fflags & value) pos += sprintf(pos, " " #name); 407 US_DO_ALL_FLAGS 408 #undef US_FLAG 409 410 *(pos++) = '\n'; 411 } 412 413 /* 414 * Calculate start of next buffer, and return value. 415 */ 416 *start = buffer + offset; 417 418 if ((pos - buffer) < offset) 419 return (0); 420 else if ((pos - buffer - offset) < length) 421 return (pos - buffer - offset); 422 else 423 return (length); 424 } 425 426 /*********************************************************************** 427 * Sysfs interface 428 ***********************************************************************/ 429 430 /* Output routine for the sysfs max_sectors file */ 431 static ssize_t show_max_sectors(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr, char *buf) 432 { 433 struct scsi_device *sdev = to_scsi_device(dev); 434 435 return sprintf(buf, "%u\n", sdev->request_queue->max_sectors); 436 } 437 438 /* Input routine for the sysfs max_sectors file */ 439 static ssize_t store_max_sectors(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr, const char *buf, 440 size_t count) 441 { 442 struct scsi_device *sdev = to_scsi_device(dev); 443 unsigned short ms; 444 445 if (sscanf(buf, "%hu", &ms) > 0 && ms <= SCSI_DEFAULT_MAX_SECTORS) { 446 blk_queue_max_sectors(sdev->request_queue, ms); 447 return strlen(buf); 448 } 449 return -EINVAL; 450 } 451 452 static DEVICE_ATTR(max_sectors, S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR, show_max_sectors, 453 store_max_sectors); 454 455 static struct device_attribute *sysfs_device_attr_list[] = { 456 &dev_attr_max_sectors, 457 NULL, 458 }; 459 460 /* 461 * this defines our host template, with which we'll allocate hosts 462 */ 463 464 struct scsi_host_template usb_stor_host_template = { 465 /* basic userland interface stuff */ 466 .name = "usb-storage", 467 .proc_name = "usb-storage", 468 .proc_info = proc_info, 469 .info = host_info, 470 471 /* command interface -- queued only */ 472 .queuecommand = queuecommand, 473 474 /* error and abort handlers */ 475 .eh_abort_handler = command_abort, 476 .eh_device_reset_handler = device_reset, 477 .eh_bus_reset_handler = bus_reset, 478 479 /* queue commands only, only one command per LUN */ 480 .can_queue = 1, 481 .cmd_per_lun = 1, 482 483 /* unknown initiator id */ 484 .this_id = -1, 485 486 .slave_alloc = slave_alloc, 487 .slave_configure = slave_configure, 488 489 /* lots of sg segments can be handled */ 490 .sg_tablesize = SG_ALL, 491 492 /* limit the total size of a transfer to 120 KB */ 493 .max_sectors = 240, 494 495 /* merge commands... this seems to help performance, but 496 * periodically someone should test to see which setting is more 497 * optimal. 498 */ 499 .use_clustering = 1, 500 501 /* emulated HBA */ 502 .emulated = 1, 503 504 /* we do our own delay after a device or bus reset */ 505 .skip_settle_delay = 1, 506 507 /* sysfs device attributes */ 508 .sdev_attrs = sysfs_device_attr_list, 509 510 /* module management */ 511 .module = THIS_MODULE 512 }; 513 514 /* To Report "Illegal Request: Invalid Field in CDB */ 515 unsigned char usb_stor_sense_invalidCDB[18] = { 516 [0] = 0x70, /* current error */ 517 [2] = ILLEGAL_REQUEST, /* Illegal Request = 0x05 */ 518 [7] = 0x0a, /* additional length */ 519 [12] = 0x24 /* Invalid Field in CDB */ 520 }; 521 522