bug-hurd
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Interface for SCSI transactions ?


From: Samuel Thibault
Subject: Re: Interface for SCSI transactions ?
Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2011 22:20:26 +0200
User-agent: Mutt/1.5.21+34 (58baf7c9f32f) (2010-12-30)

Thomas Schmitt, le Sat 10 Sep 2011 13:46:23 +0200, a écrit :
> device_t arrives in device_set_status() of gnumach/linux/dev/glue/block.c
> as (void *) and gets casted to (struct block_data *).
> This struct has an element   
>   kdev_t dev; /* Linux device number */

Also notice the DECL_DATA and INIT_DATA macros. I guess they build
valid inode and file structures.

> E.g. in gnumach/linux/src/drivers/scsi/sr.c i see
>   void sr_photocd(struct inode *inode)
>   { [...]
>     kernel_scsi_ioctl(scsi_CDs[MINOR(inode->i_rdev)].device, ...);
> which is received in gnumach/linux/src/drivers/scsi/scsi_ioctl.c by
>   int kernel_scsi_ioctl (Scsi_Device *dev, ...)

I've rather had a look at sr_ioctl, but it's basically the same.

> struct inode is defined in gnumach/linux/dev/include/linux/fs.h
> with element
>    kdev_t i_rdev;
> 
> So i assume that a new function in gnumach/linux/src/drivers/scsi/sr.c
> would be able to either:
> - derive Scsi_Device from kdev_t
> - or run the scsi_ioctl_send_command() from a kdev_t id parameter.
> 
> Is this conclusion correct ?

That looks right, yes, although I don't really see the difference
between the alternatives you propose: in both case you turn in sr.c the
i_rdev field from the inode structure into a Scsi_Device pointer, and
call scsi_ioctl_send_command from that.

> -----------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> There is no Scsi_Device used outside gnumach/linux/src/drivers/scsi.
> So i deem it more desirable to implement the latter alternative.
> I.e. a wrapper around scsi_ioctl_send_command() implemented in sr.c.
> 
> Would that be acceptable ?

A wrapper looking like sr_ioctl (i.e. taking inode & file), yes.

> -----------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> A new question arised while exploring:
> 
> Shall i use  scsi_ioctl_send_command()  or  kernel_scsi_ioctl() ?
> The latter is a wrapper around scsi_ioctl(), which can call
> scsi_ioctl_send_command().
> I do not yet understand what this wrapping is good for.
> sr.c mostly uses kernel_scsi_ioctl() but for once scsi_ioctl().

Use the former. The latter is only needed when the call is triggered by
a kernel thread and not a userland processus.

Samuel



reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]