***************************************************************************** Solaris7.txt ***************************************************************************** Installation Guide for the Symbios SDMS Solaris Driver, Version 4.06.00 This file describes the features and use of the Symbios SDMS Device Driver for the Solaris 7 Operating system. It is divided into the following sections: Introduction Features Symbios Devices Supported Description Creating the SYMHISL Driver Update Diskette How to Install Your SDMS Solaris Driver Installing the Driver During Solaris Installation Updating Solaris with the driver Troubleshooting ******************************* Introduction ******************************** Solaris 7 for x86 is an operating system designed to run on single or multiple processors. It provides a command line interface environment and a graphical environment that incorporates many high level features. Refer to the Sun Microsystems Web site, www.sun.com/docs for Solaris 7 X86 documentation for further details. The SDMS driver, symhisl, allows the Solaris operating system to interface with SCSI devices connected to Symbios SYM53C895A, SYM53C896, SYM53C1010-33 or SYM53C1010-66 SCSI controller chips. A list of features associated with this driver along with its description are described below. The procedures to install the symhisl driver during a new installation of Solaris or to update the driver with an existing installation of Solaris are also included. =============================================================================== ******************************************************************************* IMPORTANT: This software has been tested on Solaris 7 Update 8/99 and later. Older versions have not been tested. Older versions are known to require an patch version of the DCA diskette in order to install this driver. Please see the Sun website for more information about this patch. LSI Logic assumes no responsibility or liability when a user attempts to use this software with older versions of Solaris that LSI Logic has not tested. ******************************************************************************* =============================================================================== * * * * * * * * * * * * * Features * * * * * * * * * * * The SYMHISL driver supports these features: o Synchronous negotiation (including Fast SCSI/Ultra SCSI/Ultra2 SCSI o Ultra160 Data Transfers (for SYM53C1010-XX devices) o Ultra160 Domain Validation o Ultra160 Double Transition (DT) data transmissions o Multiple host adapters o Disconnect/reselect o Multiple and non-contiguous Logical Unit Number (LUN) support o Scatter/gather o Wide devices o Tagged command queuing o Multiprocessors * * * * * * * * Symbios Devices Supported * * * * * * * * * The SYMHISL driver supports the following devices and Symbios host adapters based on those devices: o SYM53C895A (SYM8953U) o SYM53C896 (SYM22910, SYM21002) o SYM53C1010 (SYM22915, SYM22903, SYM21040, SYM8955U-33, SYM8955U) * * * * * * * * * * * * * Description * * * * * * * * * * The SDMS symhisl driver is designed to Sun Microsystems SCSA specifications for device drivers. This driver allows connection of SCSI devices including disk drives, CD-ROMS, and tape drives for PCI-based machines. To support a new SCSI device, the Solaris 7 x86 architecture requires that the device complies to the SCSI standard. symhisl is a Solaris 7 32-bit driver for the Symbios SYM53C895A, SYM53C896, SYM53C1010-33 and SYM53C1010-66 SCSI controller chips. ***************************************************************************** Solaris8.txt ***************************************************************************** Installation Guide for the Symbios SDMS Solaris Driver, Version 4.07.00 This file describes the features and use of the Symbios SDMS Device Driver for the Solaris 8 Operating system. It is divided into the following sections: Introduction Features Symbios Devices Supported Description Creating the SYMHISL Driver Update Diskette How to Install Your SDMS Solaris Driver Installing the Driver During Solaris Installation Updating Solaris with the driver Troubleshooting ******************************* Introduction ******************************** Solaris 8 for x86 is an operating system designed to run on single or multiple processors. It provides a command line interface environment and a graphical environment that incorporates many high level features. Refer to the Sun Microsystems Web site, www.sun.com/docs for Solaris 8 X86 documentation for further details. The SDMS driver, symhisl, allows the Solaris operating system to interface with SCSI devices connected to Symbios SYM53C895A, SYM53C896, SYM53C1010-33 or SYM53C1010-66 SCSI controller chips. A list of features associated with this driver along with its description are described below. The procedures to install the symhisl driver during a new installation of Solaris or to update the driver with an existing installation of Solaris are also included. =============================================================================== ******************************************************************************* IMPORTANT: This software has been tested on Solaris 8 FCS. This software will not run on Solaris 7. LSI Logic assumes no responsibility or liability when a user attempts to use this software with older versions of Solaris that LSI Logic has not tested. ******************************************************************************* =============================================================================== * * * * * * * * * * * * * Features * * * * * * * * * * * The SYMHISL driver supports these features: o Synchronous negotiation (including Fast SCSI/Ultra SCSI/Ultra2 SCSI) o Ultra160 Data Transfers (for SYM53C1010-XX devices) o Ultra160 Domain Validation o Ultra160 Double Transition (DT) data transmissions o Multiple host adapters o Disconnect/reselect o Multiple and non-contiguous Logical Unit Number (LUN) support o Scatter/gather o Wide devices o Tagged command queuing o Multiprocessors o Hot swapping of SCSI devices * * * * * * * * Symbios Devices Supported * * * * * * * * * The SYMHISL driver supports the following devices and Symbios host adapters based on those devices: o SYM53C895A (SYM8953U) o SYM53C896 (SYM22910, SYM21002) o SYM53C1010 (SYM22915, SYM22903, SYM21040, SYM8955U-33, SYM8955U) * * * * * * * * * * * * * Description * * * * * * * * * * The SDMS symhisl driver is designed to Sun Microsystems SCSA specifications for device drivers. This driver allows connection of SCSI devices including disk drives, CD-ROMS, and tape drives for PCI-based machines. To support a new SCSI device, the Solaris 8 x86 architecture requires that the device complies to the SCSI standard. Symhisl is a Solaris 8 32-bit driver for the Symbios SYM53C895A, SYM53C896, SYM53C1010-33 and SYM53C1010-66 SCSI controller chips. ************************Installing the SDMS Solaris Driver********************* This section provides installation instructions for new and existing systems. The SYMHISL Driver Update diskette can be used in one of two ways: 1. To use new drivers to install or upgrade the Solaris operating environment on a machine with new hardware. -OR- 2. To add new drivers to support new hardware on an already installed and booted system. * * * * * * * New System Installation for Solaris * * * * * * * To use the driver on the SYMHISL Driver Update diskette to install Solaris (Intel Platform Edition) on a machine, follow the steps below. Use the appropriate Solaris Device Configuration Assistant Diskette appropriate for your release of Solaris 7 as the boot diskette. 1. Insert the Solaris Device Configuration Assistant Diskette into your machine's diskette drive. Also insert the Solaris Installation CD-ROM; or for network installation, verify with your system administrator that the Solaris Network Installation image is available on your network. 2. Turn on your Machine. 3. When the Solaris Device Configuration Assistant screen appears, choose F4_Add Driver. The message Enumerating buses ... appears. Then, the Install Driver Update screen appears. 4. Remove the Solaris Device Configuration Assistant Diskette from the diskette drive and insert the first Solaris Driver ITU diskette you want. 5. Press F2_Continue. The Select Solaris System Version screen appears. 6. Select the appropriate Solaris operating system, and press F2_Continue. The Loading Driver Update Software screen appears, along with a progress bar that shows the percentage of drivers that have been extracted from the diskette. Drivers are read into memory and survive long enough for the system to successfully boot to its installation program. When all the new drivers on the diskette have been processed, the Continue Driver Update Installation screen appears. 7. Remove the Solaris Driver ITU diskette from the diskette drive and insert the next Solaris Driver ITU diskette you want, if any. 8. Press F2_Continue. The Loading Driver Update Software screen appears, along with a progress bar that shows the percentage of drivers that have been extracted from the diskette. Drivers are read into memory and survive long enough for the system to successfully boot to its installation program. When all the new drivers on the diskette have been processed, the Continue Driver Update Installation screen appears. 9. Repeat Step 4 through Step 8 until all the Solaris Driver ITU diskettes you want are installed. 10. When all the drivers are processed, remove the Solaris Driver ITU diskette from the diskette drive and reinsert the Solaris Device Configuration Assistant Diskette. IMPORTANT: Do not remove the Solaris Device Configuration Assistant Diskette from the diskette drive until you see the following message displayed in a dialog box: "If you want to bypass the device configuration and boot screens when the system reboots, eject the Device Configuration Assistant/Boot diskette now." 11. Press F2_Continue. The Solaris Device Configuration Assistant screen appears. 12. Press F2_Continue. The "Enumerating buses" message appears. The Scanning Devices screen is then displayed. System devices are scanned. When scanning is complete, the Identified Devices screen appears. 13. Press F2_Continue. The message "Loading driver ..." appears followed by messages about the drivers that are required to boot your system. After a few seconds, the Boot Solaris screen appears. 14. At the Boot Solaris screen, select the device controller attached to the device that contains your install medium. 15. Press F2_Continue. Drivers for the device controller that you selected are displayed. Your system boots to run the install program. The install program starts and your machine begins booting the complete Solaris operating environment. The following messages appear some time later, and prompt the user to insert each of the Solaris Driver ITU diskette(s) required to install into your machine: Installing unbundled device driver support Extracting driver list from tree.. driver-name... Please insert the Driver Update diskette labeled Press when ready. 16. Remove the Solaris Device Configuration Assistant Diskette. Reinsert the SYMHISL Driver ITU diskette that you inserted earlier into the diskette drive. 17. Press Enter. Packages and/or patches that contain the new drivers are installed from the diskette onto your machine. Messages about each installation appear accordingly. o When the following prompt appears: Please insert the Driver Update diskette labeled Press when ready. Insert the SYMHISL ITU diskette into the floppy drive. When the prompt asking if you wish to create a new instance of the SYMHISL package appears, respond with 'n' for NO. We the prompt asking if you wish to overwrite the existing instance of SYMHISL appears, respond with 'y' for YES. 18. If drivers on other Solaris Driver ITU diskettes are required, remove the Driver ITU diskette from the diskette drive, insert the next Driver ITU diskette when prompted to insert it, press Enter, and repeat this process until all drivers you need are installed. 19. Press Enter. When installation has completed, the message "Installation complete" appears. 20. Remove the diskette from the diskette drive. 21. Reboot your machine. When the Solaris operating environment is finished booting and running, the new devices whose drivers that you installed are available for use. * * * * * * Existing System Installation for Solaris * * * * * * * Before adding new or updated drivers, the newly supported hardware devices should be installed and configured according to the instructions in the corresponding Device Reference Page, if any. See the Device Reference Manual for Solaris (Intel Platform Edition). When the Solaris Intel Platform Edition software is already installed, the simplest way to add new or updated drivers is to install the Driver ITU diskettes as patches on your system. For more information about managing diskettes and drives, see the System Administration Guide. To add new or updated drivers, follow these steps: 1. Go to the root directory. 2. To see if the Volume Management software is running on the machine that you are updating, type at the command prompt: ps -ef | grep vold 3. To temporarily stop Volume Management if it is running, type this command at the system prompt: # /etc/init.d/volmgt stop 4. Insert the Solaris Driver ITU diskette into the diskette drive. 5. Mount the Solaris Driver ITU diskette at the /mnt mount point: # mount -F pcfs /dev/diskette /mnt Note: You must mount the Solaris Driver ITU diskette at this point in the file structure to update your system successfully. 6. Execute the install script on the diskette: # /mnt/DU/sol_27/i86pc/Tools/install.sh -i The install.sh script searches for all new or updated drivers on the diskette. When a new or updated driver is found, this prompt appears: Unconditionally installing ITUs Install patch driver-name? [y] 7. If the driver is the one that you want to install, type y for yes or press Enter. If the driver is not the one you want to install, type n for no. If you specify yes, the install.sh script installs the driver you indicated as well as bootmod and bootbin patches . 8. When the installation has completed, and the install.sh script exits, unmount the diskette by typing at the command prompt: # cd / # umount /mnt 9. Remove the Solaris Driver ITU diskette from the diskette drive. 10. Reboot your machine by typing at the command prompt: # touch /reconfigure # reboot 11. If you have not already done so, turn off your system, add the new hardware, and turn on your system again. 12. At the << Current Boot Parameters >> prompt, type: b -r to force reconfiguration of the machine. When the Solaris operating environment is finished booting and running, the new devices whose drivers that you installed are available for use. ***********************************Troubleshooting***************************** The following are some informational or potential error messages that may be preceded by a warning message displayed by the operating system. In the message descriptions below; the SYMHISL signifies that can be replaced by a number assigned to it by the operating system. That value helps to identify the SCSI bus that is reporting the error. and are placeholders for strings and numbers that the system will display. SYMHISL: This hardware not supported by this driver SYMHISL has been told to control a SYM53C895A, SYM53C896, or SYM53C1010-XX controller, which is made by a manufacturer other than LSI Logic. This adapter requires a special driver provided by that manufacturer. Please contact the manufacturer for assistance. SYMHISL: Failed to map device registers SYMHISL was unable to access the hardware registers necessary for operation. The operating system did not properly configure the PCI device. SYMHISL: NVS error, failed to restore value of 'reg' property SYMHISL was able to access the resources needed to determine NVS configuration but was not able to return the system to its prior state. Further configuration errors may occur. SYMHISL: NVS error, failed to map system memory. NVS data can't be used SYMHISL: NVS error, failed to update 'reg' property. NVS data can't be used SYMHISL: NVS error, failed to allocate memory. NVS data can't be used SYMHISL: NVS error, unable to find 'reg' property. NVS data can't be used For each of the above errors, SYMHISL was not able to access NVS configuration data to see if it exists. On some systems, this will not be a problem. On other systems, however, NVS data contains the configuration information for this adapter and SYMHISL is not able to use that configuration. This may cause the user to manually configure the driver using the symhisl.conf configuration file. Please refer to the man page driver.conf(4), which is the standard reference on how to edit the symhisl.conf file. The instructions for editing symhisl.conf can also be found in the path /kernel/drv/symhisl.conf. SYMHISL: Hardware not properly enabled by system, cmd=xxxxh The system has not properly enabled the configuration resources that SYMHISL needs in order to use this hardware. The cmd=xxxxh value needs to be reported to technical support. SYMHISL: Unsupported 64-bit register address. Please load 64-bit version of kernel and driver This version of the SYMHISL driver does not support physical addresses using 64-bit values. Contact LSI Logic Technical Support at 719-533-7230 if to determine if a new driver is available to support 64-bit version. SYMHISL: The host adapter id in the .conf file is being ignored because the SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility will override it The symhisl.conf file has a line (scsi-initiator-id=x) which is used to change the host adapter SCSI ID. That line is being ignored because the SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility has set the SCSI ID. Please use the SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility to change the SCSI ID. SYMHISL: Ignored invalid scsi-initiator-id value = The symhisl.conf file has an invalid scsi-initiator-id value as displayed in the error message. The allowable values are in the range 0..15. SYMHISL: property value is too large. Using maximum value of A property value in the symhisl.conf value is greater than the maximum allowed value. The driver will use the value instead. SYMHISL: property value is too small. Using default value of A property value in the symhisl.conf value is less than the minimum allowed value. The driver will use the value instead. SYMHISL: Could not allocate memory to read configuration data The driver was unable to allocate memory required to process the configuration data. This means that the configuration was not properly determined. To fix this you may need to manually configure the driver using the symhisl.conf file. SYMHISL: Failure reading NVM configuration data The driver was unable to read the configuration data supplied by the SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility. This means that the configuration was not properly determined. To fix this you may need to manually configure the driver using the symhisl.conf file. SYMHISL: Failure reading NVM manufacturing data The driver was unable to read the configuration data supplied by the manufacturer. This means that the adapter configuration may be incorrect and unknown errors may occur. Please contact your manufacturer for a replacement adapter. SYMHISL: The boot ROM configuration utility has SCAM enabled but this driver is not capable of SCAM. Please disable SCAM in the boot ROM Some older versions of the SDMS Boot ROM are capable of using the SCAM protocol to assign SCSI IDs. The SYMHISL driver is not capable of using SCAM. In order to properly configure your system, please disable SCAM using the SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility. SYMHISL: Configuration data is corrupt and will be ignored The configuration data provided by the SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility has been determined to be corrupted. Run the SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility to correct this error. SYMHISL: Unknown synchronous value in NVM data = The SYMHISL driver needs to be updated to understand this new synchronous configuration data value. Until the driver is updated, synchronous mode will be disabled. SYMHISL: Unknown width value in NVM data = The SYMHISL driver needs to be updated to understand this new wide configuration data value. Until the driver is updated, wide mode will be disabled. SYMHISL: Unable to make reset notification callbacks The SYMHISL was unable to notify the target device driver of a SCSI bus reset. The target driver may start to malfunction because of this. SYMHISL: Disabling queue tags for target ID The SYMHISL driver has determined that the specified target is no longer responding to queue tagged I/O in a proper manner and has disabled queue tags for that device. This usually means that the specified device does not support queue tags. To disable this message, disable queue tags for the given device using the SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility. SYMHISL: Device (ID=, LUN=) not supported A Solaris target driver attempted to initialize a device whose SCSI target ID was out of the support range or whose LUN was not zero. This warning is most likely triggered by illegal entries in the target driver's conf file. SYMHISL: ddi_dma_sync() failed for data buffer Data corruption may occur SYMHISL: ddi_dma_sync() failed for I/O data at Data corruption may occur SYMHISL: ddi_dma_sync() failed for Adapter data Data corruption may occur A call to the operating system's ddi_sync_dma function failed. As a result, the system data caches may not be properly synchronized with system main memory. This may result in data corruption or failure of the symhisl driver to function properly. SYMHISL: ddi_dma_numwin() failed SYMHISL: ddi_dma_getwin() failed SYMHISL: ddi_dma_alloc_handle: h unknown/impossible SYMHISL: ddi_dma_buf_bind_handle: DDI_DMA_INUSE impossible SYMHISL: ddi_dma_buf_bind_handle: h unknown/impossible SYMHISL: ddi_dma_unbind_handle: failed The operating system failed to respond to the named routine in a known manner. This is a fatal error that is not recoverable. Please report this error to technical support. SYMHISL: Device in a slave-only slot and is unusable SYMHISL: Hi-level interrupts not supported. The adapter is in a slot that cannot be used with this driver. Please try moving the adapter to a different PCI slot. SYMHISL: Failed to attach. This adapter will not be installed Because of the previous error, this adapter could not be "attached" to the I/O subsystem and will not be accessible. See the previous error message and solve that problem. SYMHISL: Failed to allocate memory The SYMHISL driver was unable to allocate the memory needed during initialization. You may have run out of available memory. SYMHISL: Unbind failed! The driver had a problem when attempting to unload itself. This is a fatal error. SYMHISL: Unable to obtain soft state structure The SYMHISL driver was unable to initialize a required data structure and therefore did not load. Please call technical support. SYMHISL: Failed to attach interrupt handler The SYMHISL driver was unable to initialize the interrupt handler as required. Please call technical support. SYMHISL: The adapter is malfunctioning SYMHISL: The adapter is either malfunctioning, of an unknown type, or a revision that isn't supported The driver is not able to communicate with the hardware. You may need to update your driver or your hardware. SYMHISL: Failed to create DMI minor node The SYMHISL driver was unable to create a device node for the driver's DMI interface. If you are not using the DMI then you may safely ignore this message. SYMHISL: Could not attach to the SCSI subsystem The SYMHISL driver was unable to communicate with the Solaris SCSA subsystem. You may need to update your driver.