* the end, scatter-gather buffers follow page boundaries. */
blk_queue_dma_alignment(sdev->request_queue, (512 - 1));
- /* Set the SCSI level to at least 2. We'll leave it at 3 if that's
- * what is originally reported. We need this to avoid confusing
- * the SCSI layer with devices that report 0 or 1, but need 10-byte
- * commands (ala ATAPI devices behind certain bridges, or devices
- * which simply have broken INQUIRY data).
- *
- * NOTE: This means /dev/sg programs (ala cdrecord) will get the
- * actual information. This seems to be the preference for
- * programs like that.
- *
- * NOTE: This also means that /proc/scsi/scsi and sysfs may report
- * the actual value or the modified one, depending on where the
- * data comes from.
- */
- if (sdev->scsi_level < SCSI_2)
- sdev->scsi_level = sdev->sdev_target->scsi_level = SCSI_2;
-
/* Many devices have trouble transfering more than 32KB at a time,
* while others have trouble with more than 64K. At this time we
* are limiting both to 32K (64 sectores).
* a Get-Max-LUN request, we won't lose much by setting the
* revision level down to 2. The only devices that would be
* affected are those with sparse LUNs. */
- sdev->scsi_level = sdev->sdev_target->scsi_level = SCSI_2;
+ if (sdev->scsi_level > SCSI_2)
+ sdev->sdev_target->scsi_level =
+ sdev->scsi_level = SCSI_2;
/* USB-IDE bridges tend to report SK = 0x04 (Non-recoverable
* Hardware Error) when any low-level error occurs,
sdev->use_10_for_ms = 1;
}
+ /* The CB and CBI transports have no way to pass LUN values
+ * other than the bits in the second byte of a CDB. But those
+ * bits don't get set to the LUN value if the device reports
+ * scsi_level == 0 (UNKNOWN). Hence such devices must necessarily
+ * be single-LUN.
+ */
+ if ((us->protocol == US_PR_CB || us->protocol == US_PR_CBI) &&
+ sdev->scsi_level == SCSI_UNKNOWN)
+ us->max_lun = 0;
+
/* Some devices choke when they receive a PREVENT-ALLOW MEDIUM
* REMOVAL command, so suppress those commands. */
if (us->flags & US_FL_NOT_LOCKABLE)