On Wednesday 16 March 2022, Damien Le Moal wrote: > On 3/16/22 20:28, Ondrej Zary wrote: > > On Wednesday 16 March 2022, Sergey Shtylyov wrote: > >> Hello! > >> > >> On 3/14/22 12:19 AM, Ondrej Zary wrote: > >> > >> [...] > >>>>> The pata_parport is a libata-based replacement of the old PARIDE > >>>>> subsystem - driver for parallel port IDE devices. > >>>>> It uses the original paride low-level protocol drivers but does not > >>>>> need the high-level drivers (pd, pcd, pf, pt, pg). The IDE devices > >>>>> behind parallel port adapters are handled by the ATA layer. > >>>>> > >>>>> This will allow paride and its high-level drivers to be removed. > >>>>> > >>>>> paride and pata_parport are mutually exclusive because the compiled > >>>>> protocol drivers are incompatible. > >>>>> > >>>>> Tested with Imation SuperDisk LS-120 and HP C4381A (both use EPAT > >>>>> chip). > >>>>> > >>>>> Note: EPP-32 mode is buggy in EPAT - and also in all other protocol > >>>>> drivers - they don't handle non-multiple-of-4 block transfers > >>>>> correctly. This causes problems with LS-120 drive. > >>>>> There is also another bug in EPAT: EPP modes don't work unless a 4-bit > >>>>> or 8-bit mode is used first (probably some initialization missing?). > >>>>> Once the device is initialized, EPP works until power cycle. > >>>>> > >>>>> So after device power on, you have to: > >>>>> echo "parport0 epat 0" >/sys/bus/pata_parport/new_device > >>>>> echo pata_parport.0 >/sys/bus/pata_parport/delete_device > >>>>> echo "parport0 epat 4" >/sys/bus/pata_parport/new_device > >>>>> (autoprobe will initialize correctly as it tries the slowest modes > >>>>> first but you'll get the broken EPP-32 mode) > >>>>> > >>>>> Signed-off-by: Ondrej Zary <linux@xxxxxxx> > >>>> [...] > >>>>> diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/blockdev/paride.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/blockdev/paride.rst > >>>>> index e1ce90af602a..e431a1ef41eb 100644 > >>>>> --- a/Documentation/admin-guide/blockdev/paride.rst > >>>>> +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/blockdev/paride.rst > >>>> [...] > >>>>> diff --git a/drivers/ata/pata_parport.c b/drivers/ata/pata_parport.c > >>>>> new file mode 100644 > >>>>> index 000000000000..783764626a27 > >>>>> --- /dev/null > >>>>> +++ b/drivers/ata/pata_parport.c > >>>>> @@ -0,0 +1,819 @@ > >>>> [...] > >>>>> +static void pata_parport_lost_interrupt(struct ata_port *ap) > >>>>> +{ > >>>>> + u8 status; > >>>>> + struct ata_queued_cmd *qc; > >>>>> + > >>>>> + /* Only one outstanding command per SFF channel */ > >>>>> + qc = ata_qc_from_tag(ap, ap->link.active_tag); > >>>>> + /* We cannot lose an interrupt on a non-existent or polled command */ > >>>>> + if (!qc || qc->tf.flags & ATA_TFLAG_POLLING) > >>>>> + return; > >>>>> + /* > >>>>> + * See if the controller thinks it is still busy - if so the command > >>>>> + * isn't a lost IRQ but is still in progress > >>>>> + */ > >>>>> + status = pata_parport_check_altstatus(ap); > >>>>> + if (status & ATA_BUSY) > >>>>> + return; > >>>>> + > >>>>> + /* > >>>>> + * There was a command running, we are no longer busy and we have > >>>>> + * no interrupt. > >>>>> + */ > >>>>> + ata_port_warn(ap, "lost interrupt (Status 0x%x)\n", status); > >>>>> + /* Run the host interrupt logic as if the interrupt had not been lost */ > >>>>> + ata_sff_port_intr(ap, qc); > >>>>> +} > >>>> > >>>> As I said, ata_sff_lost_interrupt() could be used instead... > >>> > >>> It couldn't be used because it calls ata_sff_altstatus(). > >> > >> And? That one used to call the sff_check_altstatus() method (which you define) > >> even before my patch: > >> > >> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/dlemoal/libata.git/commit/?h=for-next&id=03c0e84f9c1e166d57d06b04497e11205f48e9a8 > > > > OK, I was probably confused by ata_sff_check_status which uses ioread directly. > > > >> [...] > >>>>> diff --git a/include/linux/pata_parport.h b/include/linux/pata_parport.h > >>>>> new file mode 100644 > >>>>> index 000000000000..f1ba57bb319c > >>>>> --- /dev/null > >>>>> +++ b/include/linux/pata_parport.h > >>>>> @@ -0,0 +1,108 @@ > >> [...] > >>>>> +static inline u16 pi_swab16(char *b, int k) > >>>>> +{ > >>>>> + union { u16 u; char t[2]; } r; > >>>>> + > >>>>> + r.t[0] = b[2 * k + 1]; r.t[1] = b[2 * k]; > >>>>> + return r.u; > >>>>> +} > >>>>> + > >>>>> +static inline u32 pi_swab32(char *b, int k) > >>>>> +{ > >>>>> + union { u32 u; char f[4]; } r; > >>>>> + > >>>>> + r.f[0] = b[4 * k + 1]; r.f[1] = b[4 * k]; > >>>>> + r.f[2] = b[4 * k + 3]; r.f[3] = b[4 * k + 2]; > >>>>> + return r.u; > >>>> > >>>> Hey, I was serious about swab{16|32}p()! Please don't use home grown byte > >>>> swapping... > >>> > >>> This crap comes from old paride.h and we can't get rid of it without touching the protocol drivers > >> > >> I don't argue about the *inline*s themselves, just about the ineffective code inside them. > >> > >>> (comm.c and kbic.c). Maybe use something like: > >>> > >>> #define pi_swab16(char *b, int k) swab16p((u16 *)&b[2 * k]) > >> > >>> but I'm not sure it's equivalent on a big-endian machine. > >> > >> These functions are endian-agnostic -- they swap always. > >> If you only need to swab the bytes on big-endian machines, you should use cpu_to_le*() and/or > >> le*_to_cpu()... > > > > swab16 swaps always but pi_swab16 does not on big-endian. It's probably a bug but doing the correct thing by accident. Other protocol drivers completely ignore endianness, probably because PARIDE was meant for x86 only. > > Fix that. ATA/IDE uses little endian. So all command & replies fields > should be handled with put_unaligned_lexx()/get_unaligned_lexx(), or > cpu_to_lexx() and lexx_to_cpu(). Fortunately, most of the code uses 8-bit only accesses (registers are 8-bit and also parport HW is mostly 8-bit). Only block reads/writes in EPP-16 and EPP-32 modes seem to be affected. I'll fix that later as I'm not touching protocol drivers now. > > > > >> [...] > >> > >> MBR, Sergey > >> > > > > > > > > -- Ondrej Zary