On 10/30/19 4:12 PM, Bart Van Assche wrote:
On 10/30/19 1:30 AM, Hannes Reinecke wrote:
On 10/28/19 9:38 PM, Bart Van Assche wrote:
If the residual is changed from signed into unsigned, how is a SCSI
LLD expected to report the difference between residual overflow and
residual underflow to the SCSI core?
You don't have to. To quote RFC 3720 page 122:
bit 5 - (O) set for Residual Overflow. In this case, the Residual
Count indicates the number of bytes that were not transferred
because the initiator's Expected Data Transfer Length was not
sufficient. For a bidirectional operation, the Residual Count
contains the residual for the write operation.
IE the 'overflow' setting in the iSCSI command response is an
indicator that there _would_ be more data if the command request
_would_ have specified a larger buffer.
But as it didn't, the entire buffer was filled, and the overflow
counter is set.
Which, of course, is then ignored by the linux SCSI stack as the
request got all data, and the residual is set to zero.
Then it's left to the caller to re-send with a larger buffer if
required. But it's nothing the SCSI stack can nor should be attempting
on its own.
Hi Hannes,
I do not agree that reporting a residual overflow by calling
scsi_set_resid(..., 0) is acceptable. For reads a residual overflow
means that the length specified in the CDB (scsi_bufflen()) exceeds the
data buffer size (length of scsi_sglist()). I think it's dangerous to
report to the block layer that such requests completed successfully and
with residual zero.
Dangerous how?
fcp3:
For read operations and write operations, if the FCP_RESID_OVER bit is
set to one, the FCP_RESID field contains the excess of the number of
bytes required by the SCSI command to be transferred over the number of
bytes specified by the FCP_DL field.
SAS doesn't even have the notion of residuals
srp04:
DOOVER , when set to one, indicates that the DATA-OUT RESIDUAL COUNT
field is valid and contains the count of data bytes that could not be
transferred from the data-out buffer because the length of the data-out
buffer was not sufficient. The application client should examine the
DATA-OUT RESIDUAL COUNT field in the context of the command to determine
whether or not an error condition occurred.
iSCSI we've already covered.
In all cases, the overflow value is an _indicator_ that additional data
is available, but was not transferred due to the lack of space.
So we will not have any buffer overflow as data is never transferred.
And in most cases an overflow is actually desired; it is a pretty common
use pattern to send a SCSI command with a small enough buffer to return
the length of available data, and then send the actual command knowing
how large the buffer needs to be.
See for example scsi_report_lun_scan() or the VPD handling code.
So again, I don't think it's something we need to worry about.
Cheers,
Hannes
--
Dr. Hannes Reinecke Teamlead Storage & Networking
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