I was working on patches which add new transport error values, when I noticed that DID_REQUEUE was not in the hostbyte_table. I do not think there is any way to hit the code path where scsi_show_result is called and where you return DID_REQUEUE, because DID_REQUEUE causes scsi-ml to always requeue the command. However, for completeness and because I want to one day send a patch that tries to add new host bytes values, I am sending this patch. Please apply when you get a chance. It is not critical. Signed-off-by: Mike Christie <michaelc@xxxxxxxxxxx> --- linux-2.6.23/drivers/scsi/constants.c.orig 2007-10-31 20:49:47.000000000 -0500 +++ linux-2.6.23/drivers/scsi/constants.c 2007-10-31 20:50:14.000000000 -0500 @@ -1355,7 +1355,7 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(scsi_print_sense); static const char * const hostbyte_table[]={ "DID_OK", "DID_NO_CONNECT", "DID_BUS_BUSY", "DID_TIME_OUT", "DID_BAD_TARGET", "DID_ABORT", "DID_PARITY", "DID_ERROR", "DID_RESET", "DID_BAD_INTR", -"DID_PASSTHROUGH", "DID_SOFT_ERROR", "DID_IMM_RETRY"}; +"DID_PASSTHROUGH", "DID_SOFT_ERROR", "DID_IMM_RETRY", "DID_REQUEUE"}; #define NUM_HOSTBYTE_STRS ARRAY_SIZE(hostbyte_table) static const char * const driverbyte_table[]={ - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html