Date: Fri, 1 Aug 1997 04:06:17 -0700 (PDT) From: asami@cs.berkeley.edu (Satoshi Asami) To: gibbs@plutotech.com Cc: gibbs@freebsd.org, scsi@freebsd.org Subject: Re: NOT READY Message-ID: <199708011106.EAA27735@silvia.HIP.Berkeley.EDU> In-Reply-To: <199707301827.MAA17071@pluto.plutotech.com> (gibbs@plutotech.com)
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Thanks for your reply, Justin. * be doing to cause the drive to spin down. You could try adding in a start * unit in the sense handler for the sd driver and see if it clears up your * problem. Something like this? === Index: sd.c =================================================================== RCS file: /usr/cvs/src/sys/scsi/sd.c,v retrieving revision 1.95.2.2 diff -u -r1.95.2.2 sd.c --- sd.c 1997/02/05 19:02:22 1.95.2.2 +++ sd.c 1997/08/01 08:54:18 @@ -853,6 +853,13 @@ if (inqbuf->dev_qual2 & SID_REMOVABLE) return SCSIRET_CONTINUE; + /* Restart if drive says not ready. + */ + if ((sense->error_code & SSD_ERRCODE_VALID) == 0x2) { + scsi_start_unit(sc_link, SCSI_ERR_OK | SCSI_SILENT); + return SCSIRET_CONTINUE; + } + /* Retry all disk errors. */ scsi_sense_print(xs); === (I haven't tried it yet...it's kinda scary. ;) * The sd driver will perform a start unit (unconditionally) when the * device is opened. This will cause the drive to spin up and everything * will go back to normal. I see. * It wouldn't surprise me at all if this were a thermal problem. * Stick a temperature sensor in the enclosure (on the drive itself) * and rule this out. I'll see how I can do that. Satoshi
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