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cfgadm_sata(8)

System Administration Commands                                  cfgadm_sata(8)



NAME
       cfgadm_sata - SATA hardware-specific commands for cfgadm

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/sbin/cfgadm [-f] [-y | -n] [-v] [-o hardware_options]
            -c function ap_id...


       /usr/sbin/cfgadm [-f] [-y | -n] [-v] [-o hardware_options]
            -x hardware_function ap_id...


       /usr/sbin/cfgadm [-v] [-a] [-s listing_options]
            [-o hardware_options] [-l [ap_id | ap_type]...]


       /usr/sbin/cfgadm [-v] [-o hardware_options] -t ap_id...


       /usr/sbin/cfgadm [-v] [-o hardware_options] -h [ap_id]...

DESCRIPTION
       The SATA hardware specific library, /usr/lib/cfgadm/sata.so.1, provides
       the functionality for SATA hot plugging  through  the  cfgadm  command.
       cfgadm operates on attachment points, which are locations in the system
       where hardware resources can be dynamically reconfigured. See cfgadm(8)
       for information regarding attachment points.


       Each SATA controller's and port multiplier's device port is represented
       by an attachment point in the device tree. SATA devices, connected  and
       configured  in the system are shown as the attachment point name exten‐
       sion. The terms "attachment point" and  "SATA  port"  are  used  inter‐
       changeably in the following description.


       Attachment  points  are  named  through ap_ids. All the SATA attachment
       points ap_id consist of a string in the following form:

         sataX/P[.M][::dsk/cXtYd0]





       where

       X             is the SATA controller number


       P             is the SATA controller's device port number (0 to 31)


       M             is the port multiplier's device port number (0 to 14) the
                     port  multiplier  host  port number (15). It is used only
                     when the port multiplier is attached  to  the  SATA  con‐
                     troller's device port.


       dev/cXtYd0    identifies the attached SATA device


       Y             is a target number



       In  general,  the  device  identifier is derived from the corresponding
       logical link for the device in /dev. Because only one LUN  (LUN  0)  is
       supported  by  the  SATA device, the "d" component of the device string
       will always have number 0 (zero).


       For example, the logical ap_id of the device port 4 of the port  multi‐
       plier connected to the device port 5 of the SATA controller 2 would be:

         sata2/5.4



       If  the  SATA  disk  or  CD/DVD  device is connected to this attachment
       point, and the device is configured, the ap_id would be:

         sata2/5.4::dsk/c2t645d0



       The cXtYd0 string identifying a device has one-to-one correspondence to
       the device attachment point.


       A  simple  listing  of attachment points in the system will include all
       SATA device ports and attached devices. For example:

         #cfgadm -l
         Ap_Id                     Type        Receptacle   Occupant     Condition
           sata0/0::dev/c0t0d0     disk        connected    configured   ok
           sata0/1::dev/c0t1d0     disk        connected    configured   ok
           sata0/2::dev/c0t2d0     cd-dvd      connected    configured   ok
           sata0/3                 sata-port   empty        unconfigured ok
           sata1/0                 sata-port   disconnected unconfigured unknown
           sata1/1                 sata port   disconnected unconfigured unknown
           sata1/2                 sata port   empty        unconfigured ok
           sata1/3.15              sata-pmult  connected    configured   ok
           sata1/3.0::dev/c0t512d0 disk        connected    configured   ok
           sata1/3.1               sata-port   empty        unconfigured ok
           sata1/3.2               sata-port   empty        unconfigured ok
           sata1/3.3               sata-port   empty        unconfigured ok
           usb0/1                  unknown     empty        unconfigured ok
           usb0/2                  unknown     empty        unconfigured ok



       See cfgadm(8) for more  information  regarding  listing  of  attachment
       points.


       The  receptacle  state  for  attachment point at the SATA port have the
       following meanings:

       empty

           The SATA port is powered-on and enabled.  No  device  presence  was
           detected on this port.


       disconnected

           The  SATA  port  is  not  enabled  or  the SATA device presence was
           detected but no communication with the device was  established,  or
           the port has failed.


       connected

           The  SATA device is detected on the port the communication with the
           device is established.



       The occupant (device attached to the SATA port) state have the  follow‐
       ing meanings:

       configured

           The  attached  SATA  device  is  configured and ready to use by the
           operating system.


       unconfigured

           No device is attached, or the SATA device attached to the SATA port
           was not yet configured. To configure it, run the command "cfgadm -c
           configure ap_id".



       The attachment point (SATA port) condition have the following meanings:

       ok

           The SATA port is powered-on and enabled, and is ready for use.


       failed

           The SATA port failed. It may be disabled and/or powered-off by  the
           system.  It is unusable and its condition is unknown. It may be due
           to the device plugged-in.


       unknown

           The SATA port is disabled and its condition is unknown.



       A "state table" is the combination of an  attachment  point  receptacle
       state,  an  occupant  state, and an attachment point (SATA port) condi‐
       tion. The valid states are:

       empty/unconfigured/ok

           The SATA port  is  enabled  and  active.  No  device  presence  was
           detected.


       disconnected/unconfigured/ok

           The  SATA port is enabled and a device presence was detected but no
           communications with the device was established.


       disconnected/unconfigured/unknown

           The SATA Port is disabled and its condition is unknown.


       disconnected/unconfigured/failed

           The SATA Port is disabled and unusable. The port  was  disabled  by
           the system due to a system-detected failure.


       connected/unconfigured/ok

           The SATA Port is enabled and active. A device presence was detected
           and the communication with a device was established. The device  is
           not configured to be used by the OS.


       connected/configured/ok

           The  device  is  present and configured, and is ready to use by the
           OS.


OPTIONS
       cfgadm defines several types of operations besides listing (-l).  These
       operations include testing, (-t), invoking configuration state changes,
       (-c), invoking hardware specific functions (-x), and obtaining configu‐
       ration administration help messages (-h).

       -c function

           The  following  generic functions are defined for the SATA hardware
           specific library. For SATA port  attachment  point,  the  following
           configuration state change operations are supported:


           connect

               Enable (activate) the SATA port and establish the communication
               with an attached device. This operation implies powering-on the
               port if necessary.


           disconnect

               Unconfigure the attached device, if it is not already unconfig‐
               ured, and disable (deactivate)  the  SATA  port.  A  subsequent
               "connect"  command  enables  SATA  port  operation but does not
               bring a device to the "configured" state.

           For a SATA device attached to the SATA port following state  change
           operations are supported:


           configure

               Configure  new  device for use by the operating system if it is
               not already configured. This command also implies connect oper‐
               ation, if necessary.


           unconfigure

               Unconfigure  the device connected to the SATA port if it is not
               already unconfigured.

           The configure and unconfigure operations  cannot  be  used  for  an
           attachment  point where the port multiplier is connected. Port mul‐
           tipliers are configured and unconfigured automatically by the  sys‐
           tem.  However,  configure  and  unconfigure operations apply to all
           SATA devices connected to the port multiplier's device ports.


       -f

           Not supported.


       -h ap_id

           SATA specific help can be obtained by using the  help  option  with
           any SATA attachment point.


       -l [-v]

           The -l option works as described in cfgadm(8). When paired with the
           -v option, the "Information" field contains the following SATA-spe‐
           cific information:

               o      Mfg: manufacturer string


               o      Product: product string


               o      No: product Serial Number



       -o hardware_options

           No hardware specific options are currently defined.


       -s listing_options

           Attachment  points  of class SATA can be listed by using the select
           suboption. See cfgadm(8).


       -t ap_id

           Perform self-test of the SATA port, if supported by the  SATA  con‐
           troller. If a port self-test operation is not supported by the SATA
           controller, an error message is issued.


       -x hardware_function

           Perform hardware specific function.

           Some of the following commands used on the SATA ports or  the  SATA
           controller  may affect any SATA devices that have been attached, as
           noted. ap_id refers to SATA port or the entire SATA controller,  as
           noted. If the operation implies unconfiguring a device, but it can‐
           not be  unconfigured  (that  is,  the  device  contains  a  mounted
           filesystem),  an  error  message is issued and the operation is not
           performed. An error message will be also issued if  the  SATA  con‐
           troller does not support specified operation.

           sata_reset_device ap_id

               Reset  the  SATA  device attached to ap_id  SATA port. The SATA
               port state does not change.


           sata_reset_port ap_id

               Reset the SATA port specified by ap_id. If  a  SATA  device  is
               attached  to  the port, it is also reset. This operation may be
               also performed on the port to which a port multiplier  is  con‐
               nected.  If  a  port  multiplier  is connected to the SATA con‐
               troller port, the SATA devices attached to the port  multiplier
               may not be reset


           sata_reset_all ap_id

               Reset  SATA  controller specified by the controller number part
               in ap_id and all attached devices  and  re-enumerate  all  con‐
               nected  devices,  including  port  multipliers and devices con‐
               nected to port multipliers' device ports.

               This operations  implies  unconfiguring  all  attached  devices
               prior  to  the  operation. Any newly enumerated devices will be
               left unconfigured.


           sata_port_deactivate ap_id

               Force the deactivation of the port when all else fails. This is
               meant as an emergency step; use with caution.


           sata_port_activate ap_id

               Force  the  activation  of  a port. This is meant for emergency
               situations on a port which  was  deactivated  to  recover  from
               errors.


           sata_port_self_test ap_id

               Perform self-test operation on the SATA controller. This opera‐
               tion implies unconfiguring all devices and resetting  the  SATA
               controller.



       -v

           Execute in verbose mode.

           The  following  Transitions  table  reports  the  state transitions
           resulting from the -c operations and hotplugging actions:


             current state     operation       possible new state
             -------------     ---------       ------------------
             empty/
             unconfigured/ok   device plug-in  connected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             empty/
             unconfigured/ok   -c unconfigure  error message, no state change

             empty/
             unconfigured/ok   -c configure    error message, no state change

             empty/
             unconfigured/ok   -c connect      error message, no state change

             empty/
             unconfigured/ok   -c disconnect   disconnected/unconfigured/unknown, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/ok   device unplug   no state change

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/ok   -c unconfigure  error message, no state change

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/ok   -c configure    error message, no state change

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/ok   -c connect      error message, no state change

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/ok   -c disconnect   error message, no state change

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/
             unknown
             (no disk plugged) -c configure    error message, state change to
                                               empty/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/
             unknown           -c configure    state change to
             (disk plugged)                    connected/configured/ok or,
                                               connected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed and
                                               possible error message

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/
             unknown           -c connect      empty/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               connected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/unknown, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/
             unknown           -c disconnect   error message, no state change

             disconnected/
             unconfigured/
             failed            any command     error message, no state change
                               other than
                               -x commands

             connected/
             unconfigured/ok   disk unplug     error message and state:
                                               empty/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             connected/
             unconfigured/ok   -c configure    connected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               connected/configured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             connected/
             unconfigured/ok   -c unconfigure  error message, no state change

             connected/
             unconfigured/ok   -c connect      error message, no state change

             connected/
             unconfigured/ok   -c disconnect   disconnected/unconfigured/unknown, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             connected/
             configured/ok     disk unplug     error message and state:
                                               empty/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             connected/
             configured/ok     -c configure    error message, no state change

             connected/
             configured/ok     -c unconfigure  error message, if device cannot be
                                               unconfigured, no state change, or
                                               connected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/ok, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed

             connected/
             configured/ok     -c connect      error message, no state change

             connected/
             configured/ok     -c disconnect   error message, if device cannot be
                                               unconfigured, no state change, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/unknown, or
                                               disconnected/unconfigured/failed



EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Configuring a Disk



       The following command configures a disk attached to SATA controller  0,
       port 0:




         example# cfgadm -c configure sata0/0




       This  command should be issued only when there is a device connected to
       the SATA port.

       Example 2 Unconfiguring a Disk



       The following command unconfigures a disk attached to  SATA  controller
       0, port 3:


         example# cfgadm -c unconfigure sata0/3






       The device identifying string is shown when the attachment point recep‐
       tacle state is "connected" and occupant state is "configured".

       Example 3 Encountering a Mounted File System While Unconfiguring a Disk



       The following command illustrates encountering a  mounted  file  system
       while unconfiguring a disk:


         example# cfgadm -c unconfigure sata1/5






       The system responds with the following:


         cfgadm: Component system is busy, try again: failed to offline:
         /devices/pci@0,0/pci8086,244e@1e/pci1095,3124@1/sd@5,0
              Resource              Information
         ------------------  --------------------------
         /dev/dsk/c1t5d0s0   mounted filesystem "/mnt"



FILES
       /usr/lib/cfgadm/sata.so.1

           Hardware specific library for generic SATA hot plugging.


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       tab()  box; cw(2.75i) |cw(2.75i) lw(2.75i) |lw(2.75i) ATTRIBUTE TYPEAT‐
       TRIBUTE VALUE _ Availabilitysystem/dynamic-reconfiguration


SEE ALSO
       config_admin(3CFGADM), libcfgadm(3LIB), attributes(7), cfgadm(8)

NOTES
       The emergency "sata_port_deactivate"  operation  is  not  supported  on
       ports  with  attached disks containing critical partitions such as root
       (/), /usr, swap, or  /var.  The  deactivate  operation  should  not  be
       attempted  on  such  ports. Incorrect usage can result in a system hang
       and require a reboot.


       Hotplugging operations are not supported by all SATA controllers.


       If SATA connectors are the hot-pluggable type and the  SATA  controller
       supports  hotplugging, a SATA device can be hotplugged at any time. The
       system detects the event and establishes  the  communication  with  the
       device. The device has to be configured by the explicit "cfgadm -c con‐
       figure ap_id" command.


       If the SATA connectors are the hot-pluggable type  and  the  SATA  con‐
       troller supports hotplugging, unplugging a device without unconfiguring
       it may result in system hang or data loss. If a device is  unconfigured
       but  receptacle  state  is  not  in  a disconnected state, unplugging a
       device from the SATA port will result in error message.

WARNINGS
       The connectors on some SATA devices do  not  conform  to  SATA  hotplug
       specifications. Performing hotplug operations on such devices can cause
       damage to the SATA controller and/or the SATA device.



Oracle Solaris 11.4               14 May 2018                   cfgadm_sata(8)
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