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- Notes on Management Module
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Overview:
- --------
- Different classes of controllers from LSI Logic accept and respond to the
- user applications in a similar way. They understand the same firmware control
- commands. Furthermore, the applications also can treat different classes of
- the controllers uniformly. Hence it is logical to have a single module that
- interfaces with the applications on one side and all the low level drivers
- on the other.
- The advantages, though obvious, are listed for completeness:
- i. Avoid duplicate code from the low level drivers.
- ii. Unburden the low level drivers from having to export the
- character node device and related handling.
- iii. Implement any policy mechanisms in one place.
- iv. Applications have to interface with only module instead of
- multiple low level drivers.
- Currently this module (called Common Management Module) is used only to issue
- ioctl commands. But this module is envisioned to handle all user space level
- interactions. So any 'proc', 'sysfs' implementations will be localized in this
- common module.
- Credits:
- -------
- "Shared code in a third module, a "library module", is an acceptable
- solution. modprobe automatically loads dependent modules, so users
- running "modprobe driver1" or "modprobe driver2" would automatically
- load the shared library module."
- - Jeff Garzik (jgarzik@pobox.com), 02.25.2004 LKML
- "As Jeff hinted, if your userspace<->driver API is consistent between
- your new MPT-based RAID controllers and your existing megaraid driver,
- then perhaps you need a single small helper module (lsiioctl or some
- better name), loaded by both mptraid and megaraid automatically, which
- handles registering the /dev/megaraid node dynamically. In this case,
- both mptraid and megaraid would register with lsiioctl for each
- adapter discovered, and lsiioctl would essentially be a switch,
- redirecting userspace tool ioctls to the appropriate driver."
- - Matt Domsch, (Matt_Domsch@dell.com), 02.25.2004 LKML
- Design:
- ------
- The Common Management Module is implemented in megaraid_mm.[ch] files. This
- module acts as a registry for low level hba drivers. The low level drivers
- (currently only megaraid) register each controller with the common module.
- The applications interface with the common module via the character device
- node exported by the module.
- The lower level drivers now understand only a new improved ioctl packet called
- uioc_t. The management module converts the older ioctl packets from the older
- applications into uioc_t. After driver handles the uioc_t, the common module
- will convert that back into the old format before returning to applications.
- As new applications evolve and replace the old ones, the old packet format
- will be retired.
- Common module dedicates one uioc_t packet to each controller registered. This
- can easily be more than one. But since megaraid is the only low level driver
- today, and it can handle only one ioctl, there is no reason to have more. But
- as new controller classes get added, this will be tuned appropriately.
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