Message ID | 20221122032603.32766-1-michael.christie@oracle.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | block/scsi/nvme: Add error codes for PR ops | expand |
Mike, > The following patches were made over Linus's tree and allow the > PR/pr_ops users to handle errors without having to know the device > type and also for SCSI handle devices that require the sense > code. Currently, we return a -Exyz type of error code if the PR call > fails before the drivers can send the command and a device specific > error code if it's queued. The problem is that the callers don't > always know the device type so they can't check for specific errors > like reservation conflicts, or transport errors or invalid operations. > > These patches add common error codes which callers can check for. This looks OK to me. Not sure which tree makes the most sense to funnel this through? Acked-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
On 11/25/22 18:48, Martin K. Petersen wrote: > > Mike, > >> The following patches were made over Linus's tree and allow the >> PR/pr_ops users to handle errors without having to know the device >> type and also for SCSI handle devices that require the sense >> code. Currently, we return a -Exyz type of error code if the PR call >> fails before the drivers can send the command and a device specific >> error code if it's queued. The problem is that the callers don't >> always know the device type so they can't check for specific errors >> like reservation conflicts, or transport errors or invalid operations. >> >> These patches add common error codes which callers can check for. > > This looks OK to me. Not sure which tree makes the most sense to funnel > this through? > > Acked-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com> > perhaps a block tree since it has block/scsi/nvme ? -ck
On Tue, Nov 29, 2022 at 04:18:19AM +0000, Chaitanya Kulkarni wrote: > > Acked-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com> > > > > perhaps a block tree since it has block/scsi/nvme ? I think Mike has SCSI work that builds on top of this, and reservations ar originally a SCSI feature. But either block or scsi is fine with me.
On 11/29/22 6:28 AM, hch@lst.de wrote: > On Tue, Nov 29, 2022 at 04:18:19AM +0000, Chaitanya Kulkarni wrote: >>> Acked-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com> >>> >> >> perhaps a block tree since it has block/scsi/nvme ? > > I think Mike has SCSI work that builds on top of this, and reservations > ar originally a SCSI feature. But either block or scsi is fine with > me. I'm fine with scsi or block, I'm assuming we won't have any conflicts from this on the block/nvme side? If we're doing block just let me know and I can queue it up.
On 11/29/22 8:00 AM, Jens Axboe wrote: > On 11/29/22 6:28 AM, hch@lst.de wrote: >> On Tue, Nov 29, 2022 at 04:18:19AM +0000, Chaitanya Kulkarni wrote: >>>> Acked-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com> >>>> >>> >>> perhaps a block tree since it has block/scsi/nvme ? >> >> I think Mike has SCSI work that builds on top of this, and reservations >> ar originally a SCSI feature. But either block or scsi is fine with >> me. > > I'm fine with scsi or block, I'm assuming we won't have any > conflicts from this on the block/nvme side? This patchset has no conflicts with anyone's trees right now. I have more patchsets that also touch the block, scsi and nvme layers that build on this set. The future patches are more heavy on the scsi side if that makes a difference. > > If we're doing block just let me know and I can queue it up. >
Mike, > This patchset has no conflicts with anyone's trees right now. > > I have more patchsets that also touch the block, scsi and nvme > layers that build on this set. The future patches are more > heavy on the scsi side if that makes a difference. OK. I merged this series into 6.2/scsi-staging. There really weren't any non-SCSI changes except for the NVMe tweak.