Driver for AMD 53c974/79C974 PCI SCSI host adapters (QNX Neutrino)
You must be root to start this driver. |
devb-amd [cam option[,option]...] [cdrom option[,option]...] [disk option[,option]...] [optical option[,option]...] [amd option[,option]...] [blk option[,option]...] &
Use commas (,) to separate the options. You can put the cam, cdrom, disk, optical, amd, and blk groups of options in any order. |
The cdrom options control the driver's interface to cam-cdrom.so. If specified, they must follow the cdrom keyword.
The disk options control the driver's interface to cam-disk.so. If specified, they must follow the disk keyword.
The optical options control the driver's interface to cam-optical.so. If specified, they must follow the optical keyword.
The amd options control the drivers interface to the AMD 53c974 and 79C974 series controllers. If you've installed multiple controllers, you can repeat these options for each controller. Remember, however, to specify the amd keyword before each controller's set of options.
The blk options control io-blk.so. If specified, they must follow the blk keyword.
The devb-amd driver is for AMD 53c974 and AMD 79C974 SCSI disk controllers.
The driver performs a scan, looking for installed units. All targets are scanned (0 to 7) and for each target, each LUN (Logical Unit Number) is scanned (0 to 7). Devices are numbered starting from 0, and each type of device is numbered separately.
The devb-amd driver autodetects all AMD 53c974 and AMD 79C974 adapters by default, therefore you must specify the amd pci option to the driver if you want a specific SCSI adapter to be used. |
The devb-amd driver closes its standard input, standard output and standard error immediately after completing its initializations. Error messages may be produced during the initialization phase and are written to standard error.
Assume an AMD 53c974 controller, and list all connected devices:
devb-amd &
Assume an AMD 53c974 controller with a PCI index of 1, and list all connected devices:
devb-amd amd pci=1 &
The devb-amd driver causes io-blk.so to adopt various block special devices under /dev. These devices are normally named hdn (or cdn for CD-ROMs), where n is the physical unit number of the device.
This driver could also require the following shared objects:
Binary | Required |
---|---|
cam-cdrom.so | For CD-ROM access. |
cam-disk.so | For hard-disk access. |
libcam.so | Always |
The devb-amd driver terminates only if an error occurs during startup, or if it has successfully forked itself upon startup because it hadn't been initially started in the background.
Unless overridden with the blk automount= option (see io-blk.so), devices are mounted as:
Device | Mountpoint | Filesystem type |
---|---|---|
/dev/hd0t77 | /hd | qnx4 |
/dev/cd0 | /cd | cd |
/dev/hd0t6 | /dos | dos |
/dev/hd0t11 | /dos | dos |
While there's no limit to the size of a disk or partition, I/O (i.e. the lseek(), read() and write() functions) is currently limited to 2 gigabytes per partition (or disk). This I/O limit has no effect on the partition size for mounted filesystems.
Known supported functions include:
chmod(), chown(), close(), closedir(), creat(), devctl(), dup(), dup2(), fcntl(), fpathconf(), fstat(), lseek(), mkdir(), mkfifo(), mknod(), open(), opendir(), pathconf(), read(), readdir(), readlink(), rewinddir(), rmdir(), stat(), symlink(), unlink() (not supported for directories), utime(), write()
Note that certain calls (such as pipe(), as well as read() and write() on FIFOs) may require the pipe manager.
"Block-oriented drivers (devb-*)," "Common access method (cam-*)," and "Filesystem drivers (fs-*)" in the Utilities Summary