Re: [PATCH 2.6.13 5/14] sas-class: sas_discover.c Discover process(end devices)

From: Luben Tuikov
Date: Wed Sep 14 2005 - 15:18:03 EST


On 09/14/05 14:43, James Bottomley wrote:
> On Wed, 2005-09-14 at 00:57 -0400, Sergey Panov wrote:
>
>>Because set of valid LUN id represented by 8 byte combinations is not
>>isomorphic to the set of unsigned int values from 0 to UINT64_MAX. While
>
>
> The transformation we're using is an isomorphism that happens to have
> the important property that single level type 00b LUNs are numerically
> equal to the legacy uses of the lun value.
>
>
>>scsilun_to_int() will convert legal LUN id into some integer, the
>>int_to_scsilun() function will not produce legal LUN id for any
>>arbitrary integer lun value.
>
>
> No that's what I said. We limit the integer scanned luns to < 256 and
> use representation 00b
>
>
>>For example, sequential LUN scanning should be stopped at int lun = 255
>>because result of converting value 256 by int_to_scsilun() will be
>>either illegal(best case) or equivalent to int lun = 0.
>
>
> It is. That's this bit of the code:
>
> @@ -965,6 +964,13 @@ static void scsi_sequential_lun_scan(str
> max_dev_lun = min(8U, max_dev_lun);
>
> /*
> + * regardless of what parameters we derived above, on no
> + * account scan further than SCSI_SCAN_LIMIT_LUNS
> + */
> + if (max_dev_lun > SCSI_SCAN_LIMIT_LUNS + 1)
> + max_dev_lun = SCSI_SCAN_LIMIT_LUNS + 1;
> +
>
>
>
>>LUN id should be presented to the management layers in a way similar to
>>MAC addresses or FC/SAS/... WWN . E.g. the usual LUN 4 on some FC
>>device will be identified by something like (in 00b, or "Peripheral
>>device addressing"):
>>
>>WWPN = 22:00:00:0c:50:05:df:6d
>>LUN = 00:04:00:00:00:00:00:00
>>
>>
>>Interestingly enough, the following is also LUN = 4 device, but in a
>>different addressing mode (01b, AKA "Logical unit addressing"):
>>
>>WWPN = 22:00:00:0c:50:05:df:6d
>>LUN = 40:04:00:00:00:00:00:00
>
>
> Firstly, those two LUNs are actually not equivalent (according to SAM-3
> section 4.9.1) because two luns are defined to be different if expressed
> in different representations.
>
> Secondly, The idea of using u64 is that all transports that don't use
> hierarchical LUNs can simply copy the number as they do today. This
> idea rests on the assumption that arrays responding to REPORT_LUNS on
> these transports always reply with type 00b. This assumption is
> suggested (but not mandated) in SAM. If they violate this assumption,
> we'll just reject all the LUNs and I'll get a bug report.

I was actually going to reply to this email and write something
sensible, but on second thought I see that it would be
a _complete_ waste of time, effort and keystrokes.

"If they violate this assumption, we'll just reject all the LUNs"
and
"I'll get a bug report"
tops it all off.

Luben


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