| CH(4) | Device Drivers Manual | CH(4) |
ch — SCSI
media-changer (juke box) driver
device ch
The ch driver provides support for a
SCSI media changer. It allows many slots of media to be
multiplexed between a number of drives. The changer device may optionally be
equipped with a bar code reader, which reads label information attached to
the media.
A SCSI adapter must also be separately configured into the system before a SCSI changer can be configured.
As the SCSI adapter is probed during boot, the
SCSI bus is scanned for devices. Any devices found which
answer as 'Changer' type devices will be 'attached' to the
ch driver. In FreeBSD
releases prior to 2.1, the first found will be attached as
ch0 and the next,
ch1 etc.
Beginning in 2.1 it is possible to specify what ch unit a device should come
on line as; refer to scsi(4) for details on kernel
configuration.
It is only necessary to explicitly configure one
ch device; data structures are dynamically allocated
as media changes are found on the SCSI bus.
User mode programs communicate with the changer driver through a number of ioctls which are described below. Changer element addresses used in the communication between the kernel and the changer device are mapped to zero-based logical addresses. Element types are specified as follows:
CHET_MTCHET_STCHET_IECHET_DTThe following ioctl(2) calls apply to the
changer. They are defined in the header file
<sys/chio.h>.
CHIOMOVEu_int cm_fromtype; /* element type to move from */ u_int cm_fromunit; /* logical unit of from element */ u_int cm_totype; /* element type to move to */ u_int cm_tounit; /* logical unit of to element */ u_int cm_flags; /* misc. flags */
CM_INVERT in the
cm_flags field is set, the medium changer is
instructed to flip the medium while moving it.CHIOEXCHANGEu_int ce_srctype; /* element type of source */ u_int ce_srcunit; /* logical unit of source */ u_int ce_fdsttype; /* element type of first destination */ u_int ce_fdstunit; /* logical unit of first destination */ u_int ce_sdsttype; /* element type of second destination */ u_int ce_sdstunit; /* logical unit of second destination */ u_int ce_flags; /* misc. flags */
CM_INVERT1 and/or
CM_INVERT2 may be set to flip the first or second
medium during the exchange operation, respectively.
CHIOPOSITIONu_int cp_type; /* element type */ u_int cp_unit; /* logical unit of element */ u_int cp_flags; /* misc. flags */
CP_INVERT to invert the picker during the
operation.CHIOGPICKERCHIOSPICKERCHIOGPARAMSu_int cp_npickers; /* number of pickers */ u_int cp_nslots; /* number of slots */ u_int cp_nportals; /* number of import/export portals */ u_int cp_ndrives; /* number of drives */
This call can be used by applications to query the dimensions
of the jukebox before using the CHIGSTATUS ioctl
to query the jukebox status.
CHIOIELEMch driver's status is not
affected by this call.CHIOGSTATUSWith each call to CHIOGSTATUS, the
status of one or more elements of one type may be queried.
The application passes a
changer_element_status_request structure to the
ch driver which contains the following
fields:
u_int cesr_element_type; u_int cesr_element_base; u_int cesr_element_count; u_int cesr_flags; struct changer_element_status *cesr_element_status;
This structure is read by the driver to determine the type,
logical base address and number of elements for which information is to
be returned in the array of changer_element_status
structures pointed to by the cesr_element_status
field. The application must allocate enough memory for
cesr_element_count status structures (see below).
The cesr_flags can optionally be set to
CESR_VOLTAGS to indicate that volume tag (bar
code) information is to be read from the jukebox and returned.
The cesr_element_base and
cesr_element_count fields must be valid with
respect to the physical configuration of the changer. If they are not,
the CHIOGSTATUS ioctl returns the
EINVAL error code.
The information about the elements is returned in an array of changer_element_status structures. This structure include at least the following fields:
u_int ces_addr; /* element address in media changer */ u_char ces_flags; /* see CESTATUS definitions below */ u_char ces_sensecode; /* additional sense code for element */ u_char ces_sensequal; /* additional sense code qualifier */ u_char ces_invert; /* invert bit */ u_char ces_svalid; /* source address (ces_source) valid */ u_short ces_source; /* source address of medium */ changer_voltag_t ces_pvoltag; /* primary volume tag */ changer_voltag_t ces_avoltag; /* alternate volume tag */ u_char ces_idvalid; /* ces_scsi_id is valid */ u_char ces_scsi_id; /* SCSI id of element (if ces_idvalid is nonzero) */ u_char ces_lunvalid; /* ces_scsi_lun is valid */ u_char ces_scsi_lun; /* SCSI lun of element (if ces_lunvalid is nonzero) */
The ces_addr field contains the address of the element in the coordinate system of the media changer. It is not used by the driver, and should be used for diagnostic purposes only.
The following flags are defined for the ces_flags field:
CESTATUS_FULLCESTATUS_IMPEXPCESTATUS_EXCEPTCESTATUS_ACCESSCESTATUS_EXENABCESTATUS_INENABNote that not all flags are valid for all element types.
This version of the ch driver has been
tested with a DEC TZ875 (5 slot, one DLT drive) and a Breece Hill Q47 (60
slot, four DLT drives, barcode reader).
Many of the features the ch driver
supports are not thoroughly tested due to the fact that the devices
available for testing do not support the necessary commands. This is true
for alternate volume tags, media flipping, import/export element handling,
multiple picker operation and other things.
If the media changer does not support features requested by the
ch driver, it will produce both console error
messages and failure return codes to the ioctls described here.
The ch driver appeared in
386BSD-0.1.
The ch driver was written by
Jason R. Thorpe
<thorpej@and.com> for
And Communications, http://www.and.com/. It was
added to the system by Stefan Grefen
<grefen@goofy.zdv.uni-mainz.de>
who apparently had such a device. It was ported to CAM by
Kenneth Merry
<ken@FreeBSD.org>. It
was updated to support volume tags by Hans Huebner
<hans@artcom.de>.
| May 14, 1998 | Debian |