Driver for Ultrastor US-14F/34F SCSI Adapter
Fsys.us14scsi [general_options...] [fsys fsys_options...] [us14scsi us14scsi_options...]...
If specified, the general_options must precede any fsys or us14scsi options:
The unit can be one of the following combinations (the number of commas affects how the unit information is interpreted):
Specify | Meaning |
---|---|
controller,target,lun | fully specified controller, target, and LUN |
controller,target | equivalent to controller,target,0 |
target | equivalent to 0,target,0 |
type | String equivalent |
---|---|
0 | direct-access (e.g. hard disk) |
1 | sequential-access (e.g. tape) |
2 | printer |
3 | processor |
4 | WORM |
5 | CD-ROM |
6 | scanner |
7 | optical |
8 | medium_changer |
9 | communications |
Not all of the above types are currently supported by the Filesystem Manager. See the -n option.
The fsys_options control the driver's interface to Fsys. If specified, they must follow the fsys keyword:
The value of num is the sum of all the buffers required for SCSI units that use sectors larger than 512 bytes. To obtain the buffer required for a unit, you must use the following formula:
buf = (2*(sector_size / 512))
The value that should be used for num will be the sum of the results for all units.
Some ISA motherboards have problems when on-board DMA and bus-mastering DMA occur concurrently. To avoid those problems, Fsys drivers which use DMA perform I/O concurrently only if the -d option is specified to either or both drivers. In general, you shouldn't use -d on an ISA machine if the floppy is going to be used at the same time as the SCSI hard disk. This option may be used safely on MCA and EISA machines.
By default, the driver assigns names as follows:
type | String equivalent | Default name |
---|---|---|
0 | direct-access (e.g. hard disk) | hd |
1 | sequential-access (e.g. tape) | tp |
4 | WORM | wo |
5 | CD-ROM | cd |
7 | optical | mo |
As in the -a general option, you can specify the type using either the number or its string equivalent.
To have the driver ignore a type of device, specify an empty setting. For example, to ignore hard disks, specify -n 0.
Use this option with care since bad blocks could be erroneously reported by the device if the SCSI bus isn't properly terminated. If this occurs and you've specified -r, the defect-mapping table will be filled unnecessarily.
The us14scsi_options control the driver's interface to the Ultrastor 14F/34F series controllers. If you've installed multiple controllers, you can repeat these options for each controller. Remember, however, to specify the us14scsi keyword before each controller's set of options.
Fsys.us14scsi is a SCSI driver for the Ultrastor US-14F and Ultrastor US-34F Host Bus Adapters.
The US 34F controller is a VESA local bus version of the US 14F. |
For each controller, the driver performs a scan, looking for installed units. All targets are scanned (0 to 7) and for each target, each LUN (Logical Unit Number) is scanned (0 to 7). Devices are numbered starting from 0, and each type of device is numbered separately. For example, if you have a hard disk and a CD-ROM device, they'll be numbered hd0 and cd0, respectively.
The Filesystem Manager supports only the following types of SCSI units:
If a tape unit is found during the driver's scan or if you specify a sequential-access unit with the -a general option, two block special files are created under /dev. By default, they're named /dev/tp0 and /dev/tpr0. Both these files reference the same physical drive, but /dev/tpr0 will perform a rewind on a close.
To boot from a unit connected to the controller, make sure the controller is configured for a 64-head BIOS entry or specify the driver's fsys -h option. |
Support a US14 SCSI controller, list all connected devices:
Fsys.us14scsi &
Support a US14 SCSI controller, list all connected devices, and register direct access devices as /dev/hardn and sequential access devices as /dev/tapen:
Fsys.us14scsi fsys -n0=hard -n1=tape &
Support a US14 SCSI controller with 4 scsi units, don't display list of connected devices. Register direct access devices (e.g. hard disks) as /dev/scsin:
Fsys.us14scsi -q fsys -n0=scsi us14scsi -u4 &
Support US14 SCSI controllers, scan I/O ports which are available for use to find all existing controllers. Reset controllers at initialization:
Fsys.us14scsi us14 -s -r &
Fsys.us14scsi closes its standard input, standard output and standard error immediately after completing its initializations. Error messages may be produced during the initialization phase and will be written to standard error.
Fsys.us14scsi will cause Fsys to adopt various block special devices under /dev. These devices will normally be named hdn, where n is the physical unit number of the device. The base portion of this filename (hd) may be overridden by the -n option.
Fsys.us14scsi will terminate only if an error occurs during startup, or if it has successfully forked itself upon startup because it had not been initially started in the background.
Don't use slay to shut down a filesystem driver! If you do, new drivers may not be able to load properly and Fsys itself may experience internal errors.
If you need to shut down a filesystem driver, follow the steps in the "Driver shutdown" section in the documentation for Fsys.