patch-2.3.43 linux/include/scsi/sg.h
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- Lines: 467
- Date:
Wed Feb 9 18:40:24 2000
- Orig file:
v2.3.42/linux/include/scsi/sg.h
- Orig date:
Sat Oct 9 11:47:50 1999
diff -u --recursive --new-file v2.3.42/linux/include/scsi/sg.h linux/include/scsi/sg.h
@@ -3,25 +3,25 @@
/*
History:
- Started: Aug 9 by Lawrence Foard (entropy@world.std.com), to allow user
- process control of SCSI devices.
+ Started: Aug 9 by Lawrence Foard (entropy@world.std.com), to allow user
+ process control of SCSI devices.
Development Sponsored by Killy Corp. NY NY
Original driver (sg.h):
* Copyright (C) 1992 Lawrence Foard
-2.x extensions to driver:
+Version 2 and 3 extensions to driver:
* Copyright (C) 1998, 1999 Douglas Gilbert
+ Version: 3.1.10 (20000123)
+ This version is for 2.3/2.4 series kernels.
- Version: 2.3.35 (990708)
- This version for 2.3 series kernels. It only differs from sg version
- 2.1.35 used in the 2.2 series kernels by changes to wait_queue. This
- in an internal kernel interface and should not effect users.
- D. P. Gilbert (dgilbert@interlog.com, dougg@triode.net.au)
-
- Changes since 2.1.34 (990603)
+ Changes since 2.1.34 (990603) and 2.3.35 (990708)
+ - add new interface structure: sg_io_hdr_t
+ - supports larger sense buffer, DMA residual count + direct IO
+ - add SG_IO ioctl (combines function of write() + read() )
+ - remove SG_SET_MERGE_FD, UNDERRUN_FLAG + _GET_ ioctls + logic
+ - add proc_fs support in /proc/scsi/sg/ directory
- add queuing info into struct sg_scsi_id
- - block negative timeout values
- - add back write() wait on previous read() when no cmd queuing
+ - def_reserved_size can be given at driver or module load time
Changes since 2.1.33 (990521)
- implement SG_SET_RESERVED_SIZE and associated memory re-org.
- add SG_NEXT_CMD_LEN to override SCSI command lengths
@@ -34,117 +34,135 @@
- clean up logging of pointers to use %p (for 64 bit architectures)
- rework usage of get_user/copy_to_user family of kernel calls
- "disown" scsi_command blocks before releasing them
- Changes since 2.1.30 (990320)
- - memory tweaks: change flags on kmalloc (GFP_KERNEL to GFP_ATOMIC)
- - increase max allowable mid-level pool usage
-
-
- New features and changes:
- - per file descriptor (fd) write-read sequencing and command queues.
- - command queuing supported (SG_MAX_QUEUE is maximum per fd).
- - scatter-gather supported (allowing potentially megabyte transfers).
- - the SCSI target, host and driver status are returned
- in unused fields of sg_header (maintaining its original size).
- - asynchronous notification support added (SIGPOLL, SIGIO) for
- read()s (write()s should never block).
- - pack_id logic added so read() can wait for a specific pack_id.
- - uses memory > ISA_DMA_THRESHOLD if adapter allows it (e.g. a
- pci scsi adapter).
- - this driver no longer uses a single SG_BIG_BUFF sized buffer
- obtained at driver/module init time. Rather it tries to obtain a
- SG_DEF_RESERVED_SIZE buffer when a fd is open()ed and frees it
- at the corresponding release() (ie per fd). Actually the "buffer"
- may be a collection of buffers if scatter-gather is being used.
- - add SG_SET_RESERVED_SIZE ioctl allowing the user to request a
- large buffer for duration of current file descriptor's lifetime.
- - SG_GET_RESERVED_SIZE ioctl can be used to find out how much
- actually has been reserved.
- - add SG_NEXT_CMD_LEN ioctl to override SCSI command length on
- the next write() to this file descriptor.
- - SG_GET_RESERVED_SIZE's presence as a symbol can be used for
- compile time identification of the version 2 sg driver.
- However, it is recommended that run time identification based on
- calling the ioctl of the same name is a more flexible and
- safer approach.
- - adds several ioctl calls, see ioctl section below.
-
- Good documentation on the original "sg" device interface and usage can be
- found in the Linux HOWTO document: "SCSI Programming HOWTO" (version 0.5)
- by Heiko Eissfeldt; last updated 7 May 1996. Here is a quick summary of
- sg basics:
- An SG device is accessed by writing SCSI commands plus any associated
- outgoing data to it; the resulting status codes and any incoming data
- are then obtained by a read call. The device can be opened O_NONBLOCK
- (non-blocking) and poll() used to monitor its progress. The device may be
- opened O_EXCL which excludes other "sg" users from this device (but not
- "sd", "st" or "sr" users). The buffer given to the write() call is made
- up as follows:
- - struct sg_header image (see below)
- - scsi command (6, 10 or 12 bytes long)
- - data to be written to the device (if any)
-
- The buffer received from the corresponding read() call contains:
- - struct sg_header image (check results + sense_buffer)
- - data read back from device (if any)
-
- The given SCSI command has its LUN field overwritten internally by the
- value associated with the device that has been opened.
-
- This device currently uses "indirect IO" in the sense that data is
- DMAed into kernel buffers from the hardware and afterwards is
- transferred into the user space (or vice versa if you are writing).
- Transfer speeds or up to 20 to 30MBytes/sec have been measured using
- indirect IO. For faster throughputs "direct IO" which cuts out the
- double handling of data is required. This will also need a new interface.
-
- Grabbing memory for those kernel buffers used in this driver for DMA may
- cause the dreaded ENOMEM error. This error seems to be more prevalent
- under early 2.2.x kernels than under the 2.0.x kernel series. For a given
- (large) transfer the memory obtained by this driver must be contiguous or
- scatter-gather must be used (if supported by the adapter). [Furthermore,
- ISA SCSI adapters can only use memory below the 16MB level on a i386.]
-
- When a "sg" device is open()ed O_RDWR then this driver will attempt to
- reserve a buffer of SG_DEF_RESERVED_SIZE that will be used by subsequent
- write()s on this file descriptor as long as:
- - it is not already in use (eg when command queuing is in use)
- - the write() does not call for a buffer size larger than the
- reserved size.
- In these cases the write() will attempt to find the memory it needs for
- DMA buffers dynamically and in the worst case will fail with ENOMEM.
- The amount of memory actually reserved depends on various dynamic factors
- and can be checked with the SG_GET_RESERVED_SIZE ioctl(). [In a very
- tight memory situation it may yield 0!] The size of the reserved buffer
- can be changed with the SG_SET_RESERVED_SIZE ioctl(). It should be
- followed with a call to the SG_GET_RESERVED_SIZE ioctl() to find out how
- much was actually reserved.
- More documentation plus test and utility programs can be found at
- http://www.torque.net/sg
+Map of SG verions to the Linux kernels in which they appear:
+ ---------- ----------------------------------
+ original all kernels < 2.2.6
+ 2.1.31 2.2.6 and 2.2.7
+ 2.1.32 2.2.8 and 2.2.9
+ 2.1.34 2.2.10 to 2.2.13
+ 2.1.36 2.2.14
+ 2.3.35 2.3.x development series kernels (starting 2.3.20)
+ 3.0.x optional version 3 sg driver for 2.2 series
+ 3.1.x candidate version 3 sg driver for 2.3 series
+
+Major new features in SG 3.x driver (cf SG 2.x drivers)
+ - SG_IO ioctl() combines function if write() and read()
+ - new interface (sg_io_hdr_t) but still supports old interface
+ - scatter/gather in user space and direct IO supported
+
+Major features in SG 2.x driver (cf original SG driver)
+ - per file descriptor (fd) write-read sequencing
+ - command queuing supported
+ - scatter-gather supported at kernel level allowing potentially
+ large transfers
+ - more SCSI status information returned
+ - asynchronous notification support added (SIGPOLL, SIGIO)
+ - read() can fetch by given pack_id
+ - uses kernel memory as appropriate for SCSI adapter being used
+ - single SG_BIG_BUFF replaced by per file descriptor "reserve
+ buffer" whose size can be manipulated by ioctls()
+
+ The term "indirect IO" refers a method by which data is DMAed into kernel
+ buffers from the hardware and afterwards is transferred into the user
+ space (or vice versa if you are writing). Transfer speeds of up to 20 to
+ 30MBytes/sec have been measured using indirect IO. For faster throughputs
+ "direct IO" which cuts out the double handling of data is required.
+ Direct IO is supported by the SG 3.x drivers on 2.3 series Linux kernels
+ (or later) and requires the use of the new interface.
+
+ Requests for direct IO with the new interface will automatically fall back
+ to indirect IO mode if they cannot be fulfilled. An example of such a case
+ is an ISA SCSI adapter which is only capable of DMAing to the lower 16MB of
+ memory due to the architecture of ISA. The 'info' field in the new
+ interface indicates whether a direct or indirect data transfer took place.
+
+ Obtaining memory for the kernel buffers used in indirect IO is done by
+ first checking if the "reserved buffer" for the current file descriptor
+ is available and large enough. If these conditions are _not_ met then
+ kernel memory is obtained on a per SCSI command basis. This corresponds
+ to a write(), read() sequence or a SG_IO ioctl() call. Further, the
+ kernel memory that is suitable for DMA may be constrained by the
+ architecture of the SCSI adapter (e.g. ISA adapters).
+
+ Documentation
+ =============
+ A web site for SG device drivers can be found at:
+ http://www.torque.net/sg [alternatively check the MAINTAINERS file]
+ The main documents are still based on 2.x versions:
+ http://www.torque.net/sg/p/scsi-generic.txt
+ http://www.torque.net/sg/p/scsi-generic_long.txt
+ The first document can also be found in the kernel source tree, probably at:
+ /usr/src/linux/Documentation/scsi-generic.txt .
+ Documentation on the changes and additions in 3.x version of the sg driver
+ can be found at: http://www.torque.net/sg/p/scsi-generic_v3.txt
+ Utility and test programs are also available at that web site.
*/
-#define SG_MAX_SENSE 16 /* too little, unlikely to change in 2.2.x */
+/* New interface introduced in the 3.x SG drivers follows */
-struct sg_header
+typedef struct sg_iovec /* same structure as used by readv() Linux system */
+{ /* call. It defines one scatter-gather element. */
+ void * iov_base; /* Starting address */
+ size_t iov_len; /* Length in bytes */
+} sg_iovec_t;
+
+
+typedef struct sg_io_hdr
{
- int pack_len; /* [o] reply_len (ie useless), ignored as input */
- int reply_len; /* [i] max length of expected reply (inc. sg_header) */
- int pack_id; /* [io] id number of packet (use ints >= 0) */
- int result; /* [o] 0==ok, else (+ve) Unix errno (best ignored) */
- unsigned int twelve_byte:1;
- /* [i] Force 12 byte command length for group 6 & 7 commands */
- unsigned int target_status:5; /* [o] scsi status from target */
- unsigned int host_status:8; /* [o] host status (see "DID" codes) */
- unsigned int driver_status:8; /* [o] driver status+suggestion */
- unsigned int other_flags:10; /* unused */
- unsigned char sense_buffer[SG_MAX_SENSE]; /* [o] Output in 3 cases:
- when target_status is CHECK_CONDITION or
- when target_status is COMMAND_TERMINATED or
- when (driver_status & DRIVER_SENSE) is true. */
-}; /* This structure is 36 bytes long on i386 */
+ char interface_id; /* [i] 'S' for SCSI generic (required) */
+ unsigned char cmd_len; /* [i] SCSI command length ( <= 16 bytes) */
+ unsigned char iovec_count; /* [i] 0 implies no scatter gather */
+ unsigned char mx_sb_len; /* [i] max length to write to sbp */
+ int dxfer_direction; /* [i] data transfer direction */
+ unsigned int dxfer_len; /* [i] byte count of data transfer */
+ void * dxferp; /* [i], [*io] points to data transfer memory
+ or scatter gather list */
+ unsigned char * cmdp; /* [i], [*i] points to command to perform */
+ unsigned char * sbp; /* [i], [*o] points to sense_buffer memory */
+ unsigned int timeout; /* [i] MAX_UINT->no timeout (unit: millisec) */
+ unsigned int flags; /* [i] 0 -> default, see SG_FLAG... */
+ int pack_id; /* [i->o] unused internally (normally) */
+ void * usr_ptr; /* [i->o] unused internally */
+ unsigned char status; /* [o] scsi status */
+ unsigned char masked_status;/* [o] shifted, masked scsi status */
+ unsigned char msg_status; /* [o] messaging level data (optional) */
+ unsigned char sb_len_wr; /* [o] byte count actually written to sbp */
+ unsigned short host_status; /* [o] errors from host adapter */
+ unsigned short driver_status;/* [o] errors from software driver */
+ int resid; /* [o] dxfer_len - actual_transferred */
+ unsigned int duration; /* [o] time taken by cmd (unit: millisec) */
+ unsigned int info; /* [o] auxiliary information */
+} sg_io_hdr_t; /* 60 bytes long (on i386) */
+
+/* Use negative values to flag difference from original sg_header structure */
+#define SG_DXFER_NONE -1 /* e.g. a SCSI Test Unit Ready command */
+#define SG_DXFER_TO_DEV -2 /* e.g. a SCSI WRITE command */
+#define SG_DXFER_FROM_DEV -3 /* e.g. a SCSI READ command */
+#define SG_DXFER_TO_FROM_DEV -4 /* treated like SG_DXFER_FROM_DEV with the
+ additional property than during indirect
+ IO the user buffer is copied into the
+ kernel buffers before the transfer */
+
+/* following flag values can be "or"-ed together */
+#define SG_FLAG_DIRECT_IO 1 /* default is indirect IO */
+#define SG_FLAG_LUN_INHIBIT 2 /* default is to put device's lun into */
+ /* the 2nd byte of SCSI command */
+#define SG_FLAG_NO_DXFER 0x10000 /* no transfer of kernel buffers to/from */
+ /* user space (debug indirect IO) */
+
+/* following 'info' values are "or"-ed together */
+#define SG_INFO_OK_MASK 0x1
+#define SG_INFO_OK 0x0 /* no sense, host nor driver "noise" */
+#define SG_INFO_CHECK 0x1 /* something abnormal happened */
+
+#define SG_INFO_DIRECT_IO_MASK 0x6
+#define SG_INFO_INDIRECT_IO 0x0 /* data xfer via kernel buffers (or no xfer) */
+#define SG_INFO_DIRECT_IO 0x2 /* direct IO requested and performed */
+#define SG_INFO_MIXED_IO 0x4 /* part direct, part indirect IO */
-typedef struct sg_scsi_id {
+typedef struct sg_scsi_id { /* used by SG_GET_SCSI_ID ioctl() */
int host_no; /* as in "scsi<n>" where 'n' is one of 0, 1, 2 etc */
int channel;
int scsi_id; /* scsi id of target device */
@@ -152,25 +170,38 @@
int scsi_type; /* TYPE_... defined in scsi/scsi.h */
short h_cmd_per_lun;/* host (adapter) maximum commands per lun */
short d_queue_depth;/* device (or adapter) maximum queue length */
- int unused1; /* probably find a good use, set 0 for now */
- int unused2; /* ditto */
-} Sg_scsi_id;
+ int unused[2]; /* probably find a good use, set 0 for now */
+} sg_scsi_id_t; /* 32 bytes long on i386 */
-/* IOCTLs: ( _GET_s yield result via 'int *' 3rd argument unless
- otherwise indicated) */
-#define SG_SET_TIMEOUT 0x2201 /* unit: jiffies (10ms on i386) */
-#define SG_GET_TIMEOUT 0x2202 /* yield timeout as _return_ value */
+typedef struct sg_req_info { /* used by SG_GET_REQUEST_TABLE ioctl() */
+ char req_state; /* 0 -> not used, 1 -> written, 2 -> ready to read */
+ char orphan; /* 0 -> normal request, 1 -> from interruped SG_IO */
+ char sg_io_owned; /* 0 -> complete with read(), 1 -> owned by SG_IO */
+ char problem; /* 0 -> no problem detected, 1 -> error to report */
+ int pack_id; /* pack_id associated with request */
+ void * usr_ptr; /* user provided pointer (in new interface) */
+ unsigned int duration; /* millisecs elapsed since written (req_state==1)
+ or request duration (req_state==2) */
+ int unused;
+} sg_req_info_t; /* 20 bytes long on i386 */
+
+
+/* IOCTLs: Those ioctls that are relevant to the SG 3.x drivers follow.
+ [Those that only apply to the SG 2.x drivers are at the end of the file.]
+ (_GET_s yield result via 'int *' 3rd argument unless otherwise indicated) */
#define SG_EMULATED_HOST 0x2203 /* true for emulated host adapter (ATAPI) */
/* Used to configure SCSI command transformation layer for ATAPI devices */
-#define SG_SET_TRANSFORM 0x2204
+/* Only supported by the ide-scsi driver */
+#define SG_SET_TRANSFORM 0x2204 /* N.B. 3rd arg is not pointer but value: */
+ /* 3rd arg = 0 to disable transform, 1 to enable it */
#define SG_GET_TRANSFORM 0x2205
#define SG_SET_RESERVED_SIZE 0x2275 /* request a new reserved buffer size */
#define SG_GET_RESERVED_SIZE 0x2272 /* actual size of reserved buffer */
-/* The following ioctl takes a 'Sg_scsi_id *' object as its 3rd argument. */
+/* The following ioctl has a 'sg_scsi_id_t *' object as its 3rd argument. */
#define SG_GET_SCSI_ID 0x2276 /* Yields fd's bus, chan, dev, lun + type */
/* SCSI id information can also be obtained from SCSI_IOCTL_GET_IDLUN */
@@ -179,66 +210,111 @@
#define SG_GET_LOW_DMA 0x227a /* 0-> use all ram for dma; 1-> low dma ram */
/* When SG_SET_FORCE_PACK_ID set to 1, pack_id is input to read() which
- will attempt to read that pack_id or block (or return EAGAIN). If
- pack_id is -1 then read oldest waiting. When ...FORCE_PACK_ID set to 0
- then pack_id ignored by read() and oldest readable fetched. */
+ tries to fetch a packet with a matching pack_id, waits, or returns EAGAIN.
+ If pack_id is -1 then read oldest waiting. When ...FORCE_PACK_ID set to 0
+ then pack_id ignored by read() and oldest readable fetched. */
#define SG_SET_FORCE_PACK_ID 0x227b
#define SG_GET_PACK_ID 0x227c /* Yields oldest readable pack_id (or -1) */
#define SG_GET_NUM_WAITING 0x227d /* Number of commands awaiting read() */
-/* Turn on error sense trace (1..8), dump this device to log/console (9)
- or dump all sg device states ( >9 ) to log/console */
-#define SG_SET_DEBUG 0x227e /* 0 -> turn off debug */
-
/* Yields max scatter gather tablesize allowed by current host adapter */
#define SG_GET_SG_TABLESIZE 0x227F /* 0 implies can't do scatter gather */
-/* Control whether sequencing per file descriptor or per device */
-#define SG_GET_MERGE_FD 0x2274 /* 0-> per fd, 1-> per device */
-#define SG_SET_MERGE_FD 0x2273 /* Attempt to change sequencing state,
- if more than current fd open on device, will fail with EBUSY */
-
-/* Get/set command queuing state per fd (default is SG_DEF_COMMAND_Q) */
-#define SG_GET_COMMAND_Q 0x2270 /* Yields 0 (queuing off) or 1 (on) */
-#define SG_SET_COMMAND_Q 0x2271 /* Change queuing state with 0 or 1 */
-
-/* Get/set whether DMA underrun will cause an error (DID_ERROR). This only
- currently applies to the [much-used] aic7xxx driver. */
-#define SG_GET_UNDERRUN_FLAG 0x2280 /* Yields 0 (don't flag) or 1 (flag) */
-#define SG_SET_UNDERRUN_FLAG 0x2281 /* Change flag underrun state */
-
#define SG_GET_VERSION_NUM 0x2282 /* Example: version 2.1.34 yields 20134 */
-#define SG_NEXT_CMD_LEN 0x2283 /* override SCSI command length with given
- number on the next write() on this file descriptor */
/* Returns -EBUSY if occupied else takes as input: 0 -> do nothing,
1 -> device reset or 2 -> bus reset (may not be activated yet) */
#define SG_SCSI_RESET 0x2284
+/* synchronous SCSI command ioctl, (only in version 3 interface) */
+#define SG_IO 0x2285 /* similar effect as write() followed by read() */
+
+#define SG_GET_REQUEST_TABLE 0x2286 /* yields table of active requests */
+
+/* How to treat EINTR during SG_IO ioctl(), only in SG 3.x series */
+#define SG_SET_KEEP_ORPHAN 0x2287 /* 1 -> hold for read(), 0 -> drop (def) */
+#define SG_GET_KEEP_ORPHAN 0x2288
+
#define SG_SCATTER_SZ (8 * 4096) /* PAGE_SIZE not available to user */
/* Largest size (in bytes) a single scatter-gather list element can have.
- The value must be a power of 2 and <= (PAGE_SIZE * 32) [131072 bytes on
+ The value must be a power of 2 and <= (PAGE_SIZE * 32) [131072 bytes on
i386]. The minimum value is PAGE_SIZE. If scatter-gather not supported
by adapter then this value is the largest data block that can be
read/written by a single scsi command. The user can find the value of
PAGE_SIZE by calling getpagesize() defined in unistd.h . */
-#define SG_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT (60*HZ) /* HZ == 'jiffies in 1 second' */
#define SG_DEFAULT_RETRIES 1
/* Defaults, commented if they differ from original sg driver */
-#define SG_DEF_COMMAND_Q 0
-#define SG_DEF_MERGE_FD 0 /* was 1 -> per device sequencing */
#define SG_DEF_FORCE_LOW_DMA 0 /* was 1 -> memory below 16MB on i386 */
#define SG_DEF_FORCE_PACK_ID 0
-#define SG_DEF_UNDERRUN_FLAG 0
-#define SG_DEF_RESERVED_SIZE SG_SCATTER_SZ
+#define SG_DEF_KEEP_ORPHAN 0
+#define SG_DEF_RESERVED_SIZE SG_SCATTER_SZ /* load time option */
/* maximum outstanding requests, write() yields EDOM if exceeded */
#define SG_MAX_QUEUE 16
#define SG_BIG_BUFF SG_DEF_RESERVED_SIZE /* for backward compatibility */
+
+/* Alternate style type names, "..._t" variants preferred */
+typedef struct sg_io_hdr Sg_io_hdr;
+typedef struct sg_io_vec Sg_io_vec;
+typedef struct sg_scsi_id Sg_scsi_id;
+typedef struct sg_req_info Sg_req_info;
+
+
+/* vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv */
+/* The older SG interface based on the 'sg_header' structure follows. */
+/* ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ */
+
+#define SG_MAX_SENSE 16 /* this only applies to the sg_header interface */
+
+struct sg_header
+{
+ int pack_len; /* [o] reply_len (ie useless), ignored as input */
+ int reply_len; /* [i] max length of expected reply (inc. sg_header) */
+ int pack_id; /* [io] id number of packet (use ints >= 0) */
+ int result; /* [o] 0==ok, else (+ve) Unix errno (best ignored) */
+ unsigned int twelve_byte:1;
+ /* [i] Force 12 byte command length for group 6 & 7 commands */
+ unsigned int target_status:5; /* [o] scsi status from target */
+ unsigned int host_status:8; /* [o] host status (see "DID" codes) */
+ unsigned int driver_status:8; /* [o] driver status+suggestion */
+ unsigned int other_flags:10; /* unused */
+ unsigned char sense_buffer[SG_MAX_SENSE]; /* [o] Output in 3 cases:
+ when target_status is CHECK_CONDITION or
+ when target_status is COMMAND_TERMINATED or
+ when (driver_status & DRIVER_SENSE) is true. */
+}; /* This structure is 36 bytes long on i386 */
+
+
+/* IOCTLs: The following are not required (or ignored) when the sg_io_hdr_t
+ interface is used. That are kept for backward compatibility with
+ the original and version 2 drivers. */
+
+#define SG_SET_TIMEOUT 0x2201 /* unit: jiffies (10ms on i386) */
+#define SG_GET_TIMEOUT 0x2202 /* yield timeout as _return_ value */
+
+/* Get/set command queuing state per fd (default is SG_DEF_COMMAND_Q.
+ Each time a sg_io_hdr_t object is seen on this file descriptor, this
+ command queuing flag is set on (overriding the previous setting). */
+#define SG_GET_COMMAND_Q 0x2270 /* Yields 0 (queuing off) or 1 (on) */
+#define SG_SET_COMMAND_Q 0x2271 /* Change queuing state with 0 or 1 */
+
+/* Turn on/off error sense trace (1 and 0 respectively, default is off).
+ Try using: "# cat /proc/scsi/sg/debug" instead in the v3 driver */
+#define SG_SET_DEBUG 0x227e /* 0 -> turn off debug */
+
+#define SG_NEXT_CMD_LEN 0x2283 /* override SCSI command length with given
+ number on the next write() on this file descriptor */
+
+
+/* Defaults, commented if they differ from original sg driver */
+#define SG_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT (60*HZ) /* HZ == 'jiffies in 1 second' */
+#define SG_DEF_COMMAND_Q 0 /* command queuing is always on when
+ the new interface is used */
+#define SG_DEF_UNDERRUN_FLAG 0
#endif
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