Re: [PATCH 0/2] Fix SCSI & USB Storage CHECK CONDITION handling

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On 2019-09-26 7:57 p.m., Alan Stern wrote:
On Fri, 27 Sep 2019, Damien Le Moal wrote:

If a non-passthrough command is terminated with a CHECK CONDITION, the
scsi error recovery code reuses the failed command scsi_cmnd structure
to process error recovery request sense. To preserve information
regarding the failed command, the functions scsi_eh_prep_cmnd() and
scsi_eh_restore_cmnd() respectively save and restore the original
command information. However, the resid field of the failed command
request structure is not preserved and reused for the request sense
handling, leading to the original command having an incorrect resid
when:
A) The command is not retried and terminated with an error
B) The command completes after retry and the underlying LLD does not set
    resid for a fully completed command (resid=0)

The first patch of this series addresses case (A) above by adding resid
as part of the command information saved using struct scsi_eh_save.

Good catch.

Case B can be observed with a WD My Book USB disks when a read or write
command is sent to the disk while the disk is in deep sleep mode
(spun down) due to a long period of inactivity (~30min).
In such case, the following command sequence happen:
1) The read or write command is terminated after a few seconds with
    CHECK CONDITION and an asc/ascq of 04/01 (LOGICAL UNIT IS IN PROCESS
    OF BECOMING READY)
2) In response to this failure, the USB mass storage driver triggers
    autosense processing, reusing the command descriptor to issue a
    request sense command with a 96B sense buffer size. The reply
    to this command gives a NOT READY / LOGICAL UNIT IS IN PROCESS
    OF BECOMING READY sense of 18B, resulting in a resid of 78B.
3) The original command is retried and failed again, with step 2
    repeated, until the drive spins up and becomes ready.
4) When the original command completes after the drive has become ready,
    the request sense command resid of 78B is seen by the scsi disk
    driver sd_done() function and wrongly generates a warning about the
    unaligned value reported.

But with the 1/1 patch in place, 4 won't happen any more, right?
sd_done() will see the resid from the successful read or write.

This problem is fixed in patch 2 by always setting a command resid to 0
when there is no residual in usb_stor_Bulk_transport(). Note that
usb_stor_CB_transport() does not need changes since usb_stor_bulk_srb()
always sets the resid for a completed command, regardless of the
residual value.

Exactly the same reasoning shows that usb_stor_Bulk_transport() also
does not need changes, doesn't it?  Which means that patch 2/2 is
unnecessary.

Alan Stern

PS: The correct term is "residue", not "residual".  I know that the
code sometimes uses the wrong word.

Digging into my T10 document archive I found this cam3r03.pdf :

  − cam_resid;
    The data residual length member contains the difference in twos
    complement form of the number of data bytes transferred by the
    HA for the SCSI command compared with the number of bytes
    requested by the CCB cam_dxfer_len member. This is calculated
    by the total number of bytes requested to be transferred by the
    CCB minus the actual number of bytes transferred by the HA.

CAM is a now withdrawn T10 standard from the 1990s that was influential
at the time. FreeBSD's SCSI subsystem is (still) based on CAM.

For a more recent standard/draft there is fcp5r00.pdf that uses the
term "residual value" when defining its fcp_resid.

The only reference to the term "residue" that I found is in CAM: an
optional message: IGNORE WIDE RESIDUE .

So I would leave the naming up to the patch author. It is pretty
clear what is being referred to in either case.

Doug Gilbert


P.S. I prefer "residual" because it is more flexible being both
an adjective and a noun.
[Ref: https://www.lexico.com/en/definition/residual]





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