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author <hch@lst.de>2005-04-10 23:19:25 -0400
committerJames Bottomley <jejb@titanic>2005-04-18 13:33:41 -0400
commit2bc474c3646efba67bdc83b7fc7d8ee7562e0106 (patch)
treee27a7c4392259688a25b3f8ca21668eb1e7fa201 /drivers/scsi/scsi_obsolete.h
parentc6295cdf656de63d6d1123def71daba6cd91939c (diff)
[PATCH] kill old EH constants
Fix up two drivers that incorrectly were using the old return values for their new-style EH methods and kill off scsi_obsolete.h that defined the constants. The initio driver has all these constansts defined locally and uses them internally, I'll fix that up some time later. Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@SteelEye.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/scsi/scsi_obsolete.h')
-rw-r--r--drivers/scsi/scsi_obsolete.h106
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 106 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/scsi/scsi_obsolete.h b/drivers/scsi/scsi_obsolete.h
deleted file mode 100644
index abeacb996ea0..000000000000
--- a/drivers/scsi/scsi_obsolete.h
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,106 +0,0 @@
1/*
2 * scsi_obsolete.h Copyright (C) 1997 Eric Youngdale
3 *
4 */
5
6#ifndef _SCSI_OBSOLETE_H
7#define _SCSI_OBSOLETE_H
8
9/*
10 * These are the return codes for the abort and reset functions. The mid-level
11 * code uses these to decide what to do next. Each of the low level abort
12 * and reset functions must correctly indicate what it has done.
13 * The descriptions are written from the point of view of the mid-level code,
14 * so that the return code is telling the mid-level drivers exactly what
15 * the low level driver has already done, and what remains to be done.
16 */
17
18/* We did not do anything.
19 * Wait some more for this command to complete, and if this does not work,
20 * try something more serious. */
21#define SCSI_ABORT_SNOOZE 0
22
23/* This means that we were able to abort the command. We have already
24 * called the mid-level done function, and do not expect an interrupt that
25 * will lead to another call to the mid-level done function for this command */
26#define SCSI_ABORT_SUCCESS 1
27
28/* We called for an abort of this command, and we should get an interrupt
29 * when this succeeds. Thus we should not restore the timer for this
30 * command in the mid-level abort function. */
31#define SCSI_ABORT_PENDING 2
32
33/* Unable to abort - command is currently on the bus. Grin and bear it. */
34#define SCSI_ABORT_BUSY 3
35
36/* The command is not active in the low level code. Command probably
37 * finished. */
38#define SCSI_ABORT_NOT_RUNNING 4
39
40/* Something went wrong. The low level driver will indicate the correct
41 * error condition when it calls scsi_done, so the mid-level abort function
42 * can simply wait until this comes through */
43#define SCSI_ABORT_ERROR 5
44
45/* We do not know how to reset the bus, or we do not want to. Bummer.
46 * Anyway, just wait a little more for the command in question, and hope that
47 * it eventually finishes. If it never finishes, the SCSI device could
48 * hang, so use this with caution. */
49#define SCSI_RESET_SNOOZE 0
50
51/* We do not know how to reset the bus, or we do not want to. Bummer.
52 * We have given up on this ever completing. The mid-level code will
53 * request sense information to decide how to proceed from here. */
54#define SCSI_RESET_PUNT 1
55
56/* This means that we were able to reset the bus. We have restarted all of
57 * the commands that should be restarted, and we should be able to continue
58 * on normally from here. We do not expect any interrupts that will return
59 * DID_RESET to any of the other commands in the host_queue, and the mid-level
60 * code does not need to do anything special to keep the commands alive.
61 * If a hard reset was performed then all outstanding commands on the
62 * bus have been restarted. */
63#define SCSI_RESET_SUCCESS 2
64
65/* We called for a reset of this bus, and we should get an interrupt
66 * when this succeeds. Each command should get its own status
67 * passed up to scsi_done, but this has not happened yet.
68 * If a hard reset was performed, then we expect an interrupt
69 * for *each* of the outstanding commands that will have the
70 * effect of restarting the commands.
71 */
72#define SCSI_RESET_PENDING 3
73
74/* We did a reset, but do not expect an interrupt to signal DID_RESET.
75 * This tells the upper level code to request the sense info, and this
76 * should keep the command alive. */
77#define SCSI_RESET_WAKEUP 4
78
79/* The command is not active in the low level code. Command probably
80 finished. */
81#define SCSI_RESET_NOT_RUNNING 5
82
83/* Something went wrong, and we do not know how to fix it. */
84#define SCSI_RESET_ERROR 6
85
86#define SCSI_RESET_SYNCHRONOUS 0x01
87#define SCSI_RESET_ASYNCHRONOUS 0x02
88#define SCSI_RESET_SUGGEST_BUS_RESET 0x04
89#define SCSI_RESET_SUGGEST_HOST_RESET 0x08
90/*
91 * This is a bitmask that is ored with one of the above codes.
92 * It tells the mid-level code that we did a hard reset.
93 */
94#define SCSI_RESET_BUS_RESET 0x100
95/*
96 * This is a bitmask that is ored with one of the above codes.
97 * It tells the mid-level code that we did a host adapter reset.
98 */
99#define SCSI_RESET_HOST_RESET 0x200
100/*
101 * Used to mask off bits and to obtain the basic action that was
102 * performed.
103 */
104#define SCSI_RESET_ACTION 0xff
105
106#endif /* SCSI_OBSOLETE_H */