On Wed, Oct 23, 2019 at 04:13:15PM +0200, Hannes Reinecke wrote: > On 10/23/19 2:52 PM, Michal Suchanek wrote: > > The WMware ESXi cdrom identifies itself as: > > sr 0:0:0:0: [sr0] scsi3-mmc drive: vendor: "NECVMWarVMware SATA CD001.00" > > model: "VMware SATA CD001.00" > > with the following get_capabilities print in sr.c: > > sr_printk(KERN_INFO, cd, > > "scsi3-mmc drive: vendor: \"%s\" model: \"%s\"\n", > > cd->device->vendor, cd->device->model); > > > > So the model looks like reliable identification while vendor does not. > > > > The drive claims to have a tray and claims to be able to close it. > > However, the UI has no notion of a tray - when medium is ejected it is > > dropped in the floor and the user must select a medium again before the > > drive can be re-loaded. On the kernel side the tray_move call to close > > the tray succeeds but the drive state does not change as a result of the > > call. > > > > The drive does not in fact emulate the tray state. There are two ways to > > get the medium state. One is the SCSI status: > > > > Physical drive: > > > > Fixed format, current; Sense key: Not Ready > > Additional sense: Medium not present - tray open > > Raw sense data (in hex): > > 70 00 02 00 00 00 00 0a 00 00 00 00 3a 02 00 00 > > 00 00 > > > > Fixed format, current; Sense key: Not Ready > > Additional sense: Medium not present - tray closed > > Raw sense data (in hex): > > 70 00 02 00 00 00 00 0a 00 00 00 00 3a 01 00 00 > > 00 00 > > > > VMware ESXi: > > > > Fixed format, current; Sense key: Not Ready > > Additional sense: Medium not present > > Info fld=0x0 [0] > > Raw sense data (in hex): > > f0 00 02 00 00 00 00 0a 00 00 00 00 3a 00 00 00 > > 00 00 > > > > So the tray state is not reported here. Other is medium status which the > > kernel prefers if available. Adding a print here gives: > > > > cdrom: get_media_event success: code = 0, door_open = 1, medium_present = 0 > > > > door_open is interpreted as open tray. This is fine so long as tray_move > > would close the tray when requested or report an error which never > > happens on VMware ESXi servers (5.5 and 6.5 tested). > > > > This is a popular virtualization platform so a workaround is worthwhile. > > > > Signed-off-by: Michal Suchanek <msuchanek@xxxxxxx> > > --- > > drivers/scsi/sr.c | 6 ++++++ > > 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+) > > > > diff --git a/drivers/scsi/sr.c b/drivers/scsi/sr.c > > index 4664fdf75c0f..8090c5bdec09 100644 > > --- a/drivers/scsi/sr.c > > +++ b/drivers/scsi/sr.c > > @@ -867,6 +867,7 @@ static void get_capabilities(struct scsi_cd *cd) > > unsigned int ms_len = 128; > > int rc, n; > > > > + static const char *model_vmware = "VMware"; > > static const char *loadmech[] = > > { > > "caddy", > > @@ -922,6 +923,11 @@ static void get_capabilities(struct scsi_cd *cd) > > buffer[n + 4] & 0x20 ? "xa/form2 " : "", /* can read xa/from2 */ > > buffer[n + 5] & 0x01 ? "cdda " : "", /* can read audio data */ > > loadmech[buffer[n + 6] >> 5]); > > + if (!strncmp(cd->device->model, model_vmware, strlen(model_vmware))) { > > + buffer[n + 6] &= ~(0xff << 5); > > + sr_printk(KERN_INFO, cd, > > + "VMware ESXi bug workaround: tray -> caddy\n"); > > + } > > if ((buffer[n + 6] >> 5) == 0) > > /* caddy drives can't close tray... */ > > cd->cdi.mask |= CDC_CLOSE_TRAY; > > > This looks something which should be handled via a blacklist flag, not > some inline hack which everyone forgets about it... AFAIK we used to have a blacklist but don't have anymore. So either it has to be resurrected for this one flag or an inline hack should be good enough. Thanks Michal