Subject: lstape, lsluns: handle non-zfcp; lin_tape multiple paths From: Steffen Maier Description: lstape, lsluns: handle non-zfcp; lin_tape multiple paths Symptom: lstape shows unexpected additional Device suffix numbers in excess output columns for each additional path of the same tape/changer driven by the IBM lin_tape device driver (independent of actual path failover enablement in lin_tape). It also shows a wrong number of found devices in the header (without --scsi-only). lstape prints error about "Unexpected extra argument:" and the usage for "sg_inq" along with wrong tabular output. lsluns prints ENOENT error text for "cat" on SCSI device sysfs attributes hba_id, wwpn, and fcp_lun. lstape with --verbose option prints ENOENT error text for "cat" on SCSI device sysfs attributes hba_id and wwpn. lstape man page: Description of --type and filter for channel tapes is incomplete. SCSI output description is incomplete. lstape shows "N/A" instead of the HBA device bus-ID with virtio-scsi-ccw. Problem: s390-tools-1.8.0 before the first upstream commit b627b8d8e1ab ("Initial s390-tools-2.0.0 import") introduced SCSI tape/changer output for lstape. It used the SCSI device serial number as lookup key to find a match in IBM lin_tape device driver proc-fs output for a given SCSI device name. Multiple paths to the same tape/changer have the same serial number. Multiple matches cause excess arguments to printf. Explaining the resulting output, the bash man page says: "The format is reused as necessary to consume all of the arguments." This also causes a wrong number of found devices. The default bash settings have nullglob disabled so if $SCSI_DEV/scsi_generic* aka /sys/bus/scsi/devices/*:*:*:*/scsi_generic* does not match anything, it leaves the glob pattern unmodified and SG_DEV=$(basename $SG_DEV/*) results in the literal "*". If $SG_INQ exists, it invoked sg_inq with more than the one allowed positional argument for a SCSI generic device node "sg_inq /dev/*". Causing error messages and the usage of sg_inq to land in $TAPE_SERIAL. lsluns iterates SCSI generic devices and unconditionally reads zfcp-specific SCSI device sysfs attributes hba_id, wwpn, and fcp_lun. lstape --verbose unconditionally reads zfcp-specific SCSI device sysfs attributes hba_id and wwpn. filter missing from synopsis. example at wrong place with filter. filter option description is a duplicate of filter option description. SCSI output description misses fields. Lstape only used the zfcp-specific sysfs attribute hba_id. Solution: Prefer sysfs to find lin_tape device name for SCSI device. Fallback: The lin_tape proc-fs output format has changed over the years. The HBA device driver string can contain whitespace (e.g. "Virtio SCSI HBA") and breaks the field numbers with tokenized parsing. Grep for the SCSI device name as word (to skip names with same substring, such as 0:0:1:1 also matching 0:0:1:10) and cut the first field 'Number' (lin_tape device name suffix). If there is no SCSI column at all [lin_tape before v2.2.0] (and no SCSI LLDD or other column with a name accidentally matching an existing SCSI device name), we get no match and better bail out with the initialized "N/A" for the lstape column "Device". To not have to rely on the nullglob setting, explicitly check for the existence of $SCSI_DEV/scsi_generic before evaluating SG_DEV=$(basename $SG_DEV/*). Also handle availability of sg_inq but absence of scsi_generic individually to provide the user with a hint if only sg is missing. Simply skip non-zfcp SCSI devices, such as iSCSI or virtio-scsi-ccw, to not erroneously access absent attributes. Assume "N/A" for HBA and WWPN of non-zfcp SCSI devices, such as iSCSI or virtio-scsi-ccw, to not erroneously access absent zfcp-specific sysfs attributes. Add filter to synopsis. Move example to option. Replace filter option description. Move existing SCSI output description to a new subsection and add description of missing fields. Also search sysfs for an ancestor with subsystem ccw. Reproduction: Attach more than one path to the same SCSI tape or changer and load the IBM lin_tape device driver. Unload sg kernel module. Attach non-zfcp SCSI devices such as iSCSI or virtio-scsi-ccw. Attach non-zfcp SCSI devices such as iSCSI or virtio-scsi-ccw. man lstape Attach SCSI tape or changer with virtio-scsi-ccw to a KVM guest and run "lstape --verbose". Upstream-ID: - Problem-ID: 170633 Signed-off-by: Steffen Maier --- zconf/lstape.8 | 68 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 54 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) --- a/zconf/lstape.8 +++ b/zconf/lstape.8 @@ -29,20 +29,6 @@ channel attached tape devices this outpu /proc/tapedevices (which is obsolete) but also includes offline devices. By default all tape devices are displayed. -Since SCSI tape devices are accessed differently to channel attached tape -devices they are only visible if they are known to the SCSI layer. There -are at least two possible drivers that can claim a SCSI tape device and the -lstape command tries to find out which one this is. For the generic tape -and changer driver the device names start with "st" or "sch", while for the -IBM tape driver this would be "IBMtape" or "IBMchanger". If "N/A" is shown, -the correct driver could not be obtained. - -The serial number of a SCSI tape can be displayed with the --verbose option. If -there is no sg_inq command available "NO/INQ" is shown as the serial number -of the tape. -If no SCSI generic (sg) kernel support is available, "NO/SG" is shown -as the serial number of the tape and "N/A" for the "Generic" column. - The lstape command without the --ccw-only option causes extra SAN traffic for each SCSI tape or changer device by invoking the sg_inq command. @@ -89,6 +75,55 @@ tape devices). Limits the output to information about the specified tape device or devices only. For CCW-attached devices only. +.SH OUTPUT FIELDS FOR SCSI TAPE/CHANGER DEVICES +.TP +.B Generic +SCSI generic device file for the tape drive, for example /dev/sg0. +"N/A" if the SCSI generic (sg) kernel functionality is not available. +.TP +.B Device +Main character device node file for accessing the tape drive or medium changer. +SCSI tape devices are only visible if they are known to the SCSI layer. There +are at least two possible drivers that can claim a SCSI tape device. The +lstape command tries to determine the device driver. For the generic tape +and changer driver the device names start with "st" or "sch", while for the +IBM tape driver this would be "IBMtape" or "IBMchanger". If "N/A" is shown, +the device driver could not be determined. +.TP +.B Target +Linux SCSI device name in H:C:T:L format. +.TP +.B Vendor +The vendor field from the SCSI device. +.TP +.B Model +The model field from the SCSI device. +.TP +.B Type +"tapedrv" for a tape drive or "changer" for a medium changer. +.TP +.B State +The state of the SCSI device object in the kernel. +Any state other than "running" can indicate problems. + +.PP + +For SCSI devices, the --verbose option additionally displays: +.TP +.B HBA +The device bus-ID of the FCP device +through which the tape drive is attached. +"N/A" if device is not attached through zfcp. +.TP +.B WWPN +The WWPN (worldwide port name) of the tape drive in the SAN. +"N/A" if device is not attached through zfcp. +.TP +.B Serial +The serial number. +"NO/INQ" if there is no sg_inq command available. +"NO/SG" if no SCSI generic (sg) kernel support is available. + .SH EXAMPLES \fBlstape\fR .RS @@ -99,3 +134,8 @@ List all tape devices that are available .RS Show all 3490 CCW devices that are online. .RE + +\fBlstape --scsi-only --verbose\fR +.RS +Show all SCSI tape or changer devices with maximum information. +.RE