Re: [PROPOSED] ata: Report 16/32bit PIO as best we can

From: Jeff Garzik
Date: Thu Apr 09 2009 - 09:25:46 EST


Mark Lord wrote:
Alan Cox wrote:
Something like this then ?


The legacy old IDE API for this is a bit primitive so we try and map stuff
sensibly onto it.

- Add flags2 as we ran out of flags
- Set PIO over DMA devices to report 32bit
- Add ability to change the PIO32 settings if the controller permits it
- Add that functionality into the sff drivers
- Add that functionality into the VLB legacy driver
- Turn on the 32bit PIO on the ninja32 and add support there

Signed-off-by: Alan Cox <alan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
..

By all means go ahead with something like this,
and thanks for doing it, Alan.

But.. these do look rather suspiciously like sysfs attrs to me.

We didn't have a sysfs in the IDE days (so Gadi added the klunky
procfs "settings" thing for there), but we do now.

I'm happy to update hdparm to check sysfs if that's where this
ends up, or to do almost nothing for it if we stick with the ioctls.

hmmm, Tejun's storage summit presentation would be quite relevant at this juncture :)

The short answer: we need a control mechanism for tasks such SATA PHY twiddling, host controller reset, host controller configuration (set/clear 32-bit I/O in this example), ...

sysfs attrs are desired for this, but we've held off largely because this is all intertwined with the long term direction of "storage model", "transport protocol" and libata's eventual move away from strict SCSI dependency.

I think the best place for sysfs attr attachment is an ata_transport module, something that's needed to be written for quite a while. You can see some of the eventual direction in scsi_transport_*.[ch] and raid_class.c.

Eventually I hope to reach a point where the current crop of SATA+SAS controllers out in the field (e.g. mvsas) will attach to scsi_transport_sas or ata_transport, depending on controller port configuration and attached device(s). And for the sake of users' sanity, a single utility should be used to configure a SATA+SAS controller port. Requiring use of hdparm when the port is in SATA mode, and sg_* when the port is in SAS mode, is a bit annoying.

Jeff




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