Block device driver question?
was-John McMillan
jcm at mtunb.ATT.COM
Wed Apr 12 03:02:15 AEST 1989
In article <5221 at bnrmtv.UUCP> miket at bnrmtv.UUCP (Michael Thompson) writes:
>Greetings everyone,
>
>If I am going to write a SCSI device driver (or help someone else
>write one) for the Unix PC, I have to learn about block device drivers
>for the Unix OS.
[yup]
>I also am writing this device driver to answer another question several
>people have brought up.
[No you aren't: there is NO pending question...
you are just pretending to be answering a question.]
> How many mountable devices can be placed in
>the Unix PC mount table? Some have thought that it may be as low
>as 3 or 4 devices, but I am inclined to believe that many more devices can
>be mounted just as with any other Unix kernel. This is as long as
>AT&T didn't do anything screwy with the mount table size :-).
[As previously posted: NMOUNT was compiled in as 4 --
unless you're running some b*stardized release (...of mine !-)
This MAY be increased to 8 in next patch release.]
...
>The space my device driver will write into will be virtual memory obtained
>through the vadalloc() call at init() time. Is there a limit to how much
>virtual memory I can allocate? I would like to vadalloc() upto 640k for
>10 of these RAM disks.
[Don't plan on loading many other drivers or
running with less than 2 MB RAM. Anything over
.5 MB is pushing your luck.]
> This call wants to know what I want to allocate
>in pages. What is the size of a virtual memory page? This memory will
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>be manipulated with the standard block and character driver entry point
>calls so I hope I can successfully emulate a diskdrive. Does anyone see
>any holes in my plans?
[Just one!-)]
...
> The read and write entry points will be called with buffers
>of data which may (most likely actually) not contain a full block of data,
>but only a partial block. Do I have to keep track of these partial buffers
>or can I have the kernel do it through physck() and physio(). I am not
>clear on exactly how these two functions deal with random amounts of data
>in the buffers passed to them.
[Maybe two!-)]
Your interest and activity are neat, but you need more assistance than
can rationally be delivered here. Find sources for an existent driver
[I'd recommend a "mem.c" first, then a disk driver] and study more.
And learn your way about the /usr/include/sys/* files -- lotsa key
info out there... like page sizes.
The Upc is a good learning machine -- but a deeper understanding of
the fundamentals is usually a prerequisite to starting a device driver.
Start with a "/dev/kmem" clone, and work onwards.
BTW: a "/dev/kmem" clone that supports HARDWARE-SPACE accesses may
speed up your SCSI debugging anyway: unless there are time-out problems,
you may be able to do much of your chip-exercising from USER-SPACE --
a REAL boom to quick turn-around. (Or system thudding, if mis-executed.)
john mcmillan -- att!mtunb!jcm -- finite answers in infinite time
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