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10564 Convert uscsi(7I) to mandoc
*** 1,43 ****
USCSI(7I) Ioctl Requests USCSI(7I)
-
-
NAME
uscsi - user SCSI command interface
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/scsi/impl/uscsi.h>
! ioctl(int fildes, int request, struct uscsi_cmd *cmd);
-
DESCRIPTION
The uscsi command is very powerful and somewhat dangerous; therefore it
has some permission restrictions. See WARNINGS for more details.
-
Drivers supporting this ioctl(2) provide a general interface allowing
! user-level applications to cause individual SCSI commands to be
! directed to a particular SCSI or ATAPI device under control of that
! driver. The uscsi command is supported by the sd driver for SCSI disks
! and ATAPI CD-ROM drives, and by the st driver for SCSI tape drives.
! uscsi may also be supported by other device drivers; see the specific
! device driver manual page for complete information.
- Applications must not assume that all Solaris disk device drivers
- support the uscsi ioctl command. The SCSI command may include a data
- transfer to or from that device, if appropriate for that command. Upon
- completion of the command, the user application can determine how many
- bytes were transferred and the status returned by the device. Also,
- optionally, if the command returns a Check Condition status, the driver
- will automatically issue a Request Sense command and return the sense
- data along with the original status. See the USCSI_RQENABLE flag below
- for this Request Sense processing. The uscsi_cmd structure is defined
- in <sys/scsi/impl/uscsi.h> and includes the following members:
-
int uscsi_flags; /* read, write, etc. see below */
short uscsi_status; /* resulting status */
short uscsi_timeout; /* Command Timeout */
caddr_t uscsi_cdb /* CDB to send to target */
caddr_t uscsi_bufaddr; /* i/o source/destination */
--- 1,38 ----
USCSI(7I) Ioctl Requests USCSI(7I)
NAME
uscsi - user SCSI command interface
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/scsi/impl/uscsi.h>
! ioctl(int filedes, int request, struct uscsi_cmd *cmd);
DESCRIPTION
The uscsi command is very powerful and somewhat dangerous; therefore it
has some permission restrictions. See WARNINGS for more details.
Drivers supporting this ioctl(2) provide a general interface allowing
! user-level applications to cause individual SCSI commands to be directed
! to a particular SCSI or ATAPI device under control of that driver. The
! uscsi command is supported by the sd(7D) driver for SCSI disks and ATAPI
! CD-ROM drives, and by the st(7D) driver for SCSI tape drives. uscsi may
! also be supported by other device drivers; see the specific device driver
! manual page for complete information.
+ Applications must not assume that all Solaris disk device drivers support
+ the uscsi ioctl command. The SCSI command may include a data transfer to
+ or from that device, if appropriate for that command. Upon completion of
+ the command, the user application can determine how many bytes were
+ transferred and the status returned by the device. Also, optionally, if
+ the command returns a Check Condition status, the driver will
+ automatically issue a Request Sense command and return the sense data
+ along with the original status. See the USCSI_RQENABLE flag below for
+ this Request Sense processing. The uscsi_cmd structure is defined in
+ <sys/scsi/impl/uscsi.h> and includes the following members:
int uscsi_flags; /* read, write, etc. see below */
short uscsi_status; /* resulting status */
short uscsi_timeout; /* Command Timeout */
caddr_t uscsi_cdb /* CDB to send to target */
caddr_t uscsi_bufaddr; /* i/o source/destination */
*** 48,132 ****
uchar_t uscsi_rqstatus; /* status of request sense cmd */
uchar_t uscsi_rqresid; /* resid of request sense cmd */
caddr_t uscsi_rqbuf; /* request sense buffer */
void *uscsi_reserved_5; /* Reserved for future use */
-
-
The fields of the uscsi_cmd structure have the following meanings:
! uscsi_flags
! The I/O direction and other details of how to carry
! out the SCSI command. Possible values are described
! below.
! uscsi_status
! The SCSI status byte returned by the device is
! returned in this field.
! uscsi_timeout
! Time in seconds to allow for completion of the
! command.
! uscsi_cdb
! A pointer to the SCSI CDB (command descriptor
! block) to be transferred to the device in command
! phase.
!
! uscsi_bufaddr
! The user buffer containing the data to be read from
! or written to the device.
!
!
! uscsi_buflen
! The length of uscsi_bufaddr.
!
!
! uscsi_resid
! If a data transfer terminates without transferring
! the entire requested amount, the remainder, or
! residue, is returned in this field.
!
!
! uscsi_cdblen
! The length of the SCSI CDB to be transferred to the
device in command phase.
! uscsi_rqlen
! The length of uscsi_rqbuf, the application's
! Request Sense buffer.
!
!
! uscsi_rqstatus
! The SCSI status byte returned for the Request Sense
command executed automatically by the driver in
response to a Check Condition status return.
! uscsi_rqresid
! The residue, or untransferred data length, of the
! Request Sense data transfer (the number of bytes,
! less than or equal to uscsi_rqlen, which were not
! filled with sense data).
- uscsi_rqbuf
- Points to a buffer in application address space to
- which the results of an automatic Request Sense
- command are written.
-
-
- uscsi_reserved_5
- Reserved for future use.
-
-
-
The uscsi_flags field defines the following:
USCSI_WRITE /* send data to device */
USCSI_SILENT /* no error messages */
USCSI_DIAGNOSE /* fail if any error occurs */
--- 43,95 ----
uchar_t uscsi_rqstatus; /* status of request sense cmd */
uchar_t uscsi_rqresid; /* resid of request sense cmd */
caddr_t uscsi_rqbuf; /* request sense buffer */
void *uscsi_reserved_5; /* Reserved for future use */
The fields of the uscsi_cmd structure have the following meanings:
! uscsi_flags The I/O direction and other details of how to carry out
! the SCSI command. Possible values are described below.
+ uscsi_status The SCSI status byte returned by the device is returned
+ in this field.
! uscsi_timeout Time in seconds to allow for completion of the command.
+ uscsi_cdb A pointer to the SCSI CDB (command descriptor block) to
+ be transferred to the device in command phase.
! uscsi_bufaddr The user buffer containing the data to be read from or
! written to the device.
+ uscsi_buflen The length of uscsi_bufaddr.
! uscsi_resid If a data transfer terminates without transferring the
! entire requested amount, the remainder, or residue, is
! returned in this field.
! uscsi_cdblen The length of the SCSI CDB to be transferred to the
device in command phase.
+ uscsi_rqlen The length of uscsi_rqbuf, the application's Request
+ Sense buffer.
! uscsi_rqstatus The SCSI status byte returned for the Request Sense
command executed automatically by the driver in
response to a Check Condition status return.
+ uscsi_rqresid The residue, or untransferred data length, of the
+ Request Sense data transfer (the number of bytes, less
+ than or equal to uscsi_rqlen, which were not filled
+ with sense data).
! uscsi_rqbuf Points to a buffer in application address space to
! which the results of an automatic Request Sense command
! are written.
+ uscsi_reserved_5 Reserved for future use.
The uscsi_flags field defines the following:
USCSI_WRITE /* send data to device */
USCSI_SILENT /* no error messages */
USCSI_DIAGNOSE /* fail if any error occurs */
*** 139,256 ****
USCSI_RESET_LUN /* reset logical unit */
USCSI_RESET_ALL /* reset all targets */
USCSI_RQENABLE /* enable request sense extensions */
USCSI_RENEGOT /* renegotiate wide/sync on next I/O */
-
-
The uscsi_flags bits have the following interpretation:
! USCSI_WRITE
! Data will be written from the initiator to the
target.
! USCSI_SILENT
! The driver should not print any console error
! messages or warnings regarding failures
! associated with this SCSI command.
! USCSI_DIAGNOSE
! The driver should not attempt any retries or
! other recovery mechanisms if this SCSI command
! terminates abnormally in any way.
! USCSI_ISOLATE
! This SCSI command should not be executed with
! other commands.
! USCSI_READ
! Data will be read from the target to the
! initiator.
!
!
! USCSI_ASYNC
! Set the SCSI bus to asynchronous mode before
! running this command.
!
!
! USCSI_SYNC
! Set the SCSI bus to synchronous mode before
! running this command.
!
!
! USCSI_RESET
! Send a SCSI bus device reset message to this
! target.
!
!
! USCSI_RESET_TARGET
! Same as USCSI_RESET. Use this flag to request
! TARGET RESET. (USCSI_RESET is maintained only for
compatibility with old applications).
!
! USCSI_RESET_LUN
! Send a SCSI logical unit reset message to this
target.
! USCSI_RESET_ALL
! USCSI_RESET_ALL, USCSI_RESET/USCSI_RESET_TARGET
! and USCSI_RESET_LUN are mutually exclusive
! options and issuing them in any simultaneous
! combination will result in implementation-
! dependent behavior
! When a USCSI reset request is combined with other
! SCSI commands, the following semantics take
! effect:
- If the USCSI RESET flag is specified, the other
- fields (other than uscsi_flags) in the uscsi_cmd
- are ignored. The uscsi_cdblen must be set to
- zero.
-
-
- USCSI_RQENABLE
- Enable Request Sense extensions. If the user
- application is prepared to receive sense data,
- this bit must be set, the fields uscsi_rqbuf and
- uscsi_rqbuflen must be non-zero, and the
- uscsi_rqbuf must point to memory writable by the
- application.
-
-
- USCSI_RENEGOT
- Tells USCSI to renegotiate wide mode and
- synchronous transfer speed before the transmitted
- SCSI command is executed. This flag in effects
- tells the target driver to pass the
- FLAG_RENEGOTIATE_WIDE_SYNC flag in the SCSI
- packet before passing the command to an adapter
- driver for transport.
-
- See the scsi_pkt(9S) flag
- FLAG_RENEGOTIATE_WIDE_SYNC for more information.
-
The uscsi_xfer_t is a type definition that corresponds to a 64-bit
unsigned integer. It should be used for the USCSIMAXXFER ioctls. This
is used for determining the maximum transfer size that can be performed
in a single USCSICMD ioctl. If the SCSI request is larger than the
! specified size, then it may not work, depending on the hardware
! platform.
-
IOCTLS
! The ioctl supported by drivers providing the uscsi interface is:
! USCSICMD
! The argument is a pointer to a uscsi_cmd structure. The
SCSI device addressed by that driver is selected, and given
the SCSI command addressed by uscsi_cdb. If this command
requires a data phase, the uscsi_buflen and uscsi_bufaddr
fields must be set appropriately; if data phase occurs, the
uscsi_resid is returned as the number of bytes not
--- 102,178 ----
USCSI_RESET_LUN /* reset logical unit */
USCSI_RESET_ALL /* reset all targets */
USCSI_RQENABLE /* enable request sense extensions */
USCSI_RENEGOT /* renegotiate wide/sync on next I/O */
The uscsi_flags bits have the following interpretation:
! USCSI_WRITE Data will be written from the initiator to the
target.
+ USCSI_SILENT The driver should not print any console error
+ messages or warnings regarding failures associated
+ with this SCSI command.
! USCSI_DIAGNOSE The driver should not attempt any retries or other
! recovery mechanisms if this SCSI command terminates
! abnormally in any way.
+ USCSI_ISOLATE This SCSI command should not be executed with other
+ commands.
! USCSI_READ Data will be read from the target to the initiator.
+ USCSI_ASYNC Set the SCSI bus to asynchronous mode before running
+ this command.
! USCSI_SYNC Set the SCSI bus to synchronous mode before running
! this command.
+ USCSI_RESET Send a SCSI bus device reset message to this target.
! USCSI_RESET_TARGET Same as USCSI_RESET. Use this flag to request TARGET
! RESET. (USCSI_RESET is maintained only for
compatibility with old applications).
! USCSI_RESET_LUN Send a SCSI logical unit reset message to this
target.
+ USCSI_RESET_ALL USCSI_RESET_ALL, USCSI_RESET/USCSI_RESET_TARGET, and
+ USCSI_RESET_LUN are mutually exclusive options and
+ issuing them in any simultaneous combination will
+ result in implementation-dependent behavior When a
+ USCSI reset request is combined with other SCSI
+ commands, the following semantics take effect: If the
+ USCSI RESET flag is specified, the other fields
+ (other than uscsi_flags) in the uscsi_cmd are
+ ignored. The uscsi_cdblen field must be set to zero.
! USCSI_RQENABLE Enable Request Sense extensions. If the user
! application is prepared to receive sense data, this
! bit must be set, the fields uscsi_rqbuf and
! uscsi_rqbuflen must be non-zero, and the uscsi_rqbuf
! must point to memory writable by the application.
! USCSI_RENEGOT Tells USCSI to renegotiate wide mode and synchronous
! transfer speed before the transmitted SCSI command is
! executed. This flag in effects tells the target
! driver to pass the FLAG_RENEGOTIATE_WIDE_SYNC flag in
! the SCSI packet before passing the command to an
! adapter driver for transport. See the scsi_pkt(9S)
! flag FLAG_RENEGOTIATE_WIDE_SYNC for more information.
The uscsi_xfer_t is a type definition that corresponds to a 64-bit
unsigned integer. It should be used for the USCSIMAXXFER ioctls. This
is used for determining the maximum transfer size that can be performed
in a single USCSICMD ioctl. If the SCSI request is larger than the
! specified size, then it may not work, depending on the hardware platform.
IOCTLS
! The ioctl() supported by drivers providing the uscsi interface is:
! USCSICMD The argument is a pointer to a uscsi_cmd structure. The
SCSI device addressed by that driver is selected, and given
the SCSI command addressed by uscsi_cdb. If this command
requires a data phase, the uscsi_buflen and uscsi_bufaddr
fields must be set appropriately; if data phase occurs, the
uscsi_resid is returned as the number of bytes not
*** 259,340 ****
command terminates with Check Condition status, and Request
Sense is enabled, the sense data itself is returned in
uscsi_rqbuf. The uscsi_rqresid provides the residue of the
Request Sense data transfer.
!
! USCSIMAXXFER
! The argument is a pointer to a uscsi_xfer_t value. The
maximum transfer size that can be used with the USCSICMD
ioctl for the current device will be returned in the
uscsi_xfer_t.
-
Not all devices which support the USCSICMD ioctl also
support the USCSIMAXXFER ioctl.
-
ERRORS
! EINVAL
! A parameter has an incorrect, or unsupported, value.
! EIO
! An error occurred during the execution of the command.
!
! EPERM
! A process without root credentials tried to execute the
! USCSICMD or USCSIMAXXFER ioctl.
!
!
! EFAULT
! The uscsi_cmd itself, the uscsi_cdb, the uscsi_buf, the
uscsi_rqbuf, or the uscsi_xfer_t point to an invalid address.
- ATTRIBUTES
- See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
-
-
-
-
- +---------------------+-----------------+
- | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
- +---------------------+-----------------+
- |Interface Stability | Committed |
- +---------------------+-----------------+
-
SEE ALSO
ioctl(2), attributes(5), sd(7D), st(7D)
- ANSI Small Computer System Interface-2 (SCSI-2)
-
WARNINGS
The uscsi command is very powerful, but somewhat dangerous, and so its
use is restricted to processes running as root, regardless of the file
permissions on the device node. The device driver code expects to own
the device state, and uscsi commands can change the state of the device
and confuse the device driver. It is best to use uscsi commands only
! with no side effects, and avoid commands such as Mode Select, as they
! may cause damage to data stored on the drive or system panics. Also, as
! the commands are not checked in any way by the device driver, any block
! may be overwritten, and the block numbers are absolute block numbers on
! the drive regardless of which slice number is used to send the command.
-
The uscsi interface is not recommended for very large data transfers
(typically more than 16MB). If the requested transfer size exceeds the
maximum transfer size of the DMA engine, it will not be broken up into
! multiple transfers and DMA errors may result. The USCSIMAXXFER ioctl
! can be used to determine the maximum transfer size.
-
The USCSICMD ioctl associates a struct uscsi_cmd with a device by using
! an open file descriptor to the device. Other APIs might provide the
! same struct uscsi_cmd programming interface, but perform device
! association in some other manner.
!
!
! September 23, 2016 USCSI(7I)
--- 181,236 ----
command terminates with Check Condition status, and Request
Sense is enabled, the sense data itself is returned in
uscsi_rqbuf. The uscsi_rqresid provides the residue of the
Request Sense data transfer.
! USCSIMAXXFER The argument is a pointer to a uscsi_xfer_t value. The
maximum transfer size that can be used with the USCSICMD
ioctl for the current device will be returned in the
uscsi_xfer_t.
Not all devices which support the USCSICMD ioctl also
support the USCSIMAXXFER ioctl.
ERRORS
! EINVAL A parameter has an incorrect, or unsupported, value.
+ EIO An error occurred during the execution of the command.
! EPERM A process without root credentials tried to execute the USCSICMD
! or USCSIMAXXFER ioctl.
! EFAULT The uscsi_cmd itself, the uscsi_cdb, the uscsi_buf, the
uscsi_rqbuf, or the uscsi_xfer_t point to an invalid address.
+ STABILITY
+ Committed
SEE ALSO
ioctl(2), attributes(5), sd(7D), st(7D)
+ ANSI Small Computer System Interface-2 (SCSI-2).
WARNINGS
The uscsi command is very powerful, but somewhat dangerous, and so its
use is restricted to processes running as root, regardless of the file
permissions on the device node. The device driver code expects to own
the device state, and uscsi commands can change the state of the device
and confuse the device driver. It is best to use uscsi commands only
! with no side effects, and avoid commands such as Mode Select, as they may
! cause damage to data stored on the drive or system panics. Also, as the
! commands are not checked in any way by the device driver, any block may
! be overwritten, and the block numbers are absolute block numbers on the
! drive regardless of which slice number is used to send the command.
The uscsi interface is not recommended for very large data transfers
(typically more than 16MB). If the requested transfer size exceeds the
maximum transfer size of the DMA engine, it will not be broken up into
! multiple transfers and DMA errors may result. The USCSIMAXXFER ioctl can
! be used to determine the maximum transfer size.
The USCSICMD ioctl associates a struct uscsi_cmd with a device by using
! an open file descriptor to the device. Other APIs might provide the same
! struct uscsi_cmd programming interface, but perform device association in
! some other manner.
! illumos October 23, 2017 illumos