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MPS(4)		       FreeBSD Kernel Interfaces Manual			MPS(4)

NAME
     mps -- LSI	Fusion-MPT 2 IT/IR 6Gb/s Serial	Attached SCSI/SATA driver

SYNOPSIS
     To	compile	this driver into the kernel, place these lines in the kernel
     configuration file:

	   device pci
	   device scbus
	   device mps

     The driver	can be loaded as a module at boot time by placing this line in
     loader.conf(5):

	   mps_load="YES"

DESCRIPTION
     The mps driver provides support for Broadcom Ltd./Avago Tech (LSI)	Fu-
     sion-MPT 2	IT/IR SAS controllers and WarpDrive solid state	storage	cards.

HARDWARE
     These controllers are supported by	the mps	driver:

     o	 Broadcom Ltd./Avago Tech (LSI)	SAS 2004 (4 Port SAS)
     o	 Broadcom Ltd./Avago Tech (LSI)	SAS 2008 (8 Port SAS)
     o	 Broadcom Ltd./Avago Tech (LSI)	SAS 2108 (8 Port SAS)
     o	 Broadcom Ltd./Avago Tech (LSI)	SAS 2116 (16 Port SAS)
     o	 Broadcom Ltd./Avago Tech (LSI)	SAS 2208 (8 Port SAS)
     o	 Broadcom Ltd./Avago Tech (LSI)	SAS 2308 (8 Port SAS)
     o	 Broadcom Ltd./Avago Tech (LSI)	SSS6200	Solid State Storage
     o	 Intel Integrated RAID Module RMS25JB040
     o	 Intel Integrated RAID Module RMS25JB080
     o	 Intel Integrated RAID Module RMS25KB040
     o	 Intel Integrated RAID Module RMS25KB080

CONFIGURATION
     In	all tunable descriptions below,	X represents the adapter number.

     To	disable	MSI interrupts for all mps driver instances, set this tunable
     value in loader.conf(5):

	   hw.mps.disable_msi=1

     To	disable	MSI interrupts for a specific mps driver instance, set this
     tunable value in loader.conf(5):

	   dev.mps.X.disable_msi=1

     To	disable	MSI-X interrupts for all mps driver instances, set this	tun-
     able value	in loader.conf(5):

	   hw.mps.disable_msix=1

     To	disable	MSI-X interrupts for a specific	mps driver instance, set this
     tunable value in loader.conf(5):

	   dev.mps.X.disable_msix=1

     To	set the	maximum	number of DMA chains allocated for all adapters, set
     this tunable in loader.conf(5):

	   hw.mps.max_chains=NNNN

     To	set the	maximum	number of DMA chains allocated for a specific adapter,
     set this tunable in loader.conf(5):

	   dev.mps.X.max_chains=NNNN

     The default max_chains value is 16384.

     The current number	of free	chain frames is	stored in the
     dev.mps.X.chain_free sysctl(8) variable.

     The lowest	number of free chain frames seen since boot is stored in the
     dev.mps.X.chain_free_lowwater sysctl(8) variable.

     The number	of times that chain frame allocations have failed since	boot
     is	stored in the dev.mps.X.chain_alloc_fail sysctl(8) variable.  This can
     be	used to	determine whether the max_chains tunable should	be increased
     to	help performance.

     The current number	of active I/O commands is shown	in the
     dev.mps.X.io_cmds_active sysctl(8)	variable.

     To	set the	maximum	number of pages	that will be used per I/O for all
     adapters, set this	tunable	in loader.conf(5):

	   hw.mps.max_io_pages=NNNN

     To	set the	maximum	number of pages	that will be used per I/O for a	spe-
     cific adapter, set	this tunable in	loader.conf(5):

	   dev.mps.X.max_io_pages=NNNN

     The default max_io_pages value is -1, meaning that	the maximum I/O	size
     that will be used per I/O will be calculated using	the IOCFacts values
     stored in the controller.	The lowest value that the driver will use for
     max_io_pages is 1,	otherwise IOCFacts will	be used	to calculate the maxi-
     mum I/O size.  The	smaller	I/O size calculated from either	max_io_pages
     or	IOCFacts will be the maximum I/O size used by the driver.

     The highest number	of active I/O commands seen since boot is stored in
     the dev.mps.X.io_cmds_highwater sysctl(8) variable.

     Devices can be excluded from mps control for all adapters by setting this
     tunable in	loader.conf(5):

	   hw.mps.exclude_ids=Y

     Y represents the target ID	of the device.	If more	than one device	is to
     be	excluded, target IDs are separated by commas.

     Devices can be excluded from mps control for a specific adapter by	set-
     ting this tunable in loader.conf(5):

	   dev.mps.X.exclude_ids=Y

     Y represents the target ID	of the device.	If more	than one device	is to
     be	excluded, target IDs are separated by commas.

     The adapter can issue the StartStopUnit SCSI command to SATA direct-ac-
     cess devices during shutdown.  This allows	the device to quiesce powering
     down.  To control this feature for	all adapters, set the

	   hw.mps.enable_ssu

     tunable in	loader.conf(5) to one of these values:

	   0	   Do not send SSU to either HDDs or SSDs.

	   1	   Send	SSU to SSDs, but not to	HDDs.  This is the default
		   value.

	   2	   Send	SSU to HDDs, but not to	SSDs.

	   3	   Send	SSU to both HDDs and SSDs.

     To	control	this feature for a specific adapter, set this tunable value in
     loader.conf(5):

	   dev.mps.X.enable_ssu

     The same set of values are	valid as when setting this tunable for all
     adapters.

     SATA disks	that take several seconds to spin up and fail the SATA Iden-
     tify command might	not be discovered by the driver.  This problem can
     sometimes be overcome by increasing the value of the spinup wait time in
     loader.conf(5) with the

	   hw.mps.spinup_wait_time=NNNN

     tunable.  NNNN represents the number of seconds to	wait for SATA devices
     to	spin up	when the device	fails the initial SATA Identify	command.

     Spinup wait times can be set for specific adapters	in loader.conf(5):
     with the

	   dev.mps.X.spinup_wait_time=NNNN

     tunable.  NNNN is the number of seconds to	wait for SATA devices to spin
     up	when they fail the initial SATA	Identify command.

     The driver	can map	devices	discovered by the adapter so that target IDs
     corresponding to a	specific device	persist	across resets and reboots.  In
     some cases	it is possible for devices to lose their mapped	IDs due	to un-
     expected behavior from certain hardware, such as some types of enclo-
     sures.  To	overcome this problem, a tunable is provided that will force
     the driver	to map devices using the Phy number associated with the	de-
     vice.  This feature is not	recommended if the topology includes multiple
     enclosures/expanders.  If multiple	enclosures/expanders are present in
     the topology, Phy numbers are repeated, causing all devices at these Phy
     numbers except the	first device to	fail enumeration.  To control this
     feature for all adapters, set the

	   hw.mps.use_phy_num

     tunable in	loader.conf(5) to one of these values:

	   -1	   Only	use Phy	numbers	to map devices and bypass the driver's
		   mapping logic.

	   0	   Never use Phy numbers to map	devices.

	   1	   Use Phy numbers to map devices, but only if the driver's
		   mapping logic fails to map the device that is being enumer-
		   ated.  This is the default value.

     To	control	this feature for a specific adapter, set this tunable value in
     loader.conf(5):

	   dev.mps.X.use_phy_num

     The same set of values are	valid as when setting this tunable for all
     adapters.

DEBUGGING
     Driver diagnostic printing	is controlled in loader.conf(5)	by using the
     global hw.mps.debug_level and per-device dev.mps.X.debug_level tunables.
     One can alter the debug level for any adapter at run-time using the
     sysctl(8) variable	dev.mps.X.debug_level.

     All debug_level variables can be named by either an integer value or a
     text string.  Multiple values can be specified together by	either ORing
     the integer values	or by providing	a comma-separated list of names.  A
     text string prefixed by "+" adds the specified debug levels to the	exist-
     ing set, while the	prefix "-" removes them	from the existing set.	The
     current debug_level status	is reported in both formats for	convenience.
     The following levels are available:

	   Flag	     Name	 Description
	   0x0001    info	 Basic information (enabled by default)
	   0x0002    fault	 Driver	faults (enabled	by default)
	   0x0004    event	 Controller events
	   0x0008    log	 Logging data from controller
	   0x0010    recovery	 Tracing of recovery operations
	   0x0020    error	 Parameter errors and programming bugs
	   0x0040    init	 System	initialization operations
	   0x0080    xinfo	 More detailed information
	   0x0100    user	 Tracing of user-generated commands (IOCTL)
	   0x0200    mapping	 Tracing of device mapping
	   0x0400    trace	 Tracing through driver	functions

SEE ALSO
     cam(4), cd(4), ch(4), da(4), mpr(4), mpt(4), pci(4), sa(4), scsi(4),
     targ(4), loader.conf(5), sysctl(8)

HISTORY
     The mps driver first appeared in FreeBSD 9.0.

AUTHORS
     The mps driver was	originally written by Scott Long <scottl@FreeBSD.org>.
     It	has been improved and tested by	LSI Corporation, Avago Technologies
     (formally LSI), and Broadcom Ltd. (formally Avago).

     This man page was written by Ken Merry <ken@FreeBSD.org> with additional
     input from	Stephen	McConnell <slm@FreeBSD.org>.

FreeBSD	13.0			 June 1, 2019			  FreeBSD 13.0

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | HARDWARE | CONFIGURATION | DEBUGGING | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | AUTHORS

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=mps&manpath=FreeBSD+13.2-RELEASE+and+Ports>

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