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185 lines
7.6 KiB
Plaintext
185 lines
7.6 KiB
Plaintext
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SCSI emulation
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==============
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E-UAE's SCSI emulation allows any CD-ROM drives on the host machine to be
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used as Amiga SCSI devices within the emulation. You can use this to fully
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support CD-ROMs, audio discs, CD-writing, etc. in AmigaOS. SCSI emulation is
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also required to emulate a CD-TV or CD32.
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In general, to enable SCSI emulation simply add the 'scsi=true' option to
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your config file. Any useable CD or DVD devices that E-UAE finds will be
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available to AmigaOS via the device driver 'uaescsi.device' on consecutive
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unit numbers starting at unit 0. However, depending on your host platform,
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there may a number of host configuration issues which can make using the
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SCSI emulation problematic.
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I'll start with the easy stuff. If you're running E-UAE on AmigaOS (or a
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clone) or BeOS, then don't worry. The SCSI emulation works transparently.
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Just set the 'scsi=true' config option and away you go.
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Linux
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-----
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Starting with version 0.8.29, E-UAE's SCSI emulation can directly
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communicate with the Linux kernel's CD-ROM driver to access a single
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CD/DVD drive (it currently doesn't support multiple drives, unlike the
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libscg back-end).
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To use, simply specify the drive's device file with the configuration
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option 'scsi_device=' (as well as, obviously, 'scsi=true'. For example:
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scsi_device=/dev/hdc
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You should ensure that the account you use to run E-UAE has permission
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to access this device file.
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You may run into problems if your Linux distribution has the HAL
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daemon installed. This software continually polls your removable media
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drives to detect insertion/removal of discs, and this activity may
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interfere with E-UAE's SCSI emulation. A solution to this problem
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needs to be investigated.
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This Linux-native SCSI back-end is less well-tested than the libscg
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back-end. It has not been tested with real SCSI devices (only ATAPI
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devices) and depending on the bugginess of your Linux ATAPI driver
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and/or the firmware of your drive, problems may occur.
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Linux and libscg
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----------------
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Using the libscg-based SCSI emulation on Linux can be troublesome,
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depending on how your Linux system is set up. If cdrecord works on
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your set-up, then there's a good chance that the SCSI emulation will
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too since it uses cdrecord's SCSI transport layer, libscg. There are
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some points to be aware of, however.
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Firstly, you need a kernel module installed which support sending SCSI
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commands to your CD/DVD device. For real SCSI devices, this will be the sg
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(SCSI generic) module. For ATAPI devices on 2.4 kernels, you need the
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ide-scsi (SCSI over ATA) module and the sg module. (On 2.6 kernels, the
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ide-cd driver directly supports sending SCSI commands to ATAPI devices, but
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we'll come to that in a minute.)
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If you're using sg or ide-scsi and sg, then your devices are accessed via
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device nodes of the form /dev/sg0, /dev/sg1, etc. You need read and write
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permission on all of these for SCSI emulation in E-UAE to work (Note that
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cdrecord is typically installed SUID root, so typically the default
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permissions on the /dev/sgx nodes will not be sufficient. Installing E-UAE as
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SUID root is one possibility, but not a terribly good idea security-wise.
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One solution to this is to set the owner of the /dev/sgx nodes as the group
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'cdrom' and add you own user account to that group. For example, as root, do
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# chgrp cdrom /dev/sg*
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# adduser evilrich cdrom
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Use your own account ID, of course, rather than 'evilrich', which is me.
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If your system doesn't have the adduser command, you can always manually
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edit the /etc/group file or use some whizz-bang, GUI-based user/group
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configuration utility to do the job.
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If you log in as yourself again and start E-UAE (remember to add 'scsi=true'
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to your config file first), then the SCSI emulation should work. If so you'll
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see something like this logged to the console when E-UAE starts up.
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scsibus0:
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0,0,0 0 'BTC ' 'BCE1610IM ' 'A.20' CD-ROM
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0,1,0 1 *
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0,2,0 2 *
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0,3,0 3 *
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0,4,0 4 *
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0,5,0 5 *
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0,6,0 6 *
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0,7,0 7 *
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SCSIDEV: 1 devices found
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support_scsi = 1 support_ioctl = 0
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If you're using a 2.6 kernel, E-UAE can access ATAPI devices on the host
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directly via the kernel ide-cd driver without the sg kernel module. To do
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this on older 2.6 kernels, add the config option
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scsi_device=ATAPI
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in your config file (remember to add scsi=true also) and make sure you have
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read and write access to the necessary device nodes corresponding to the
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devices you wish to use with UAE (for example, /dev/hdc or whatever).
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For newer 2.6 kernels (>=2.6.12?), the libscg ATAPI transport method no
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longer works and you have to use the ATA method. To do this, specify the
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device path to your CD/DVD drive with the scsi_device= option. For example:
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scsi_device=/dev/hdc
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MacOS X
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-------
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Now we get to the real problems. SCSI emulation with E-UAE on OS X is
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currently a real pig, due to some features and limitations of OS X. The big
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problem is that you need a writable device - a CD or DVD burner - for SCSI
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emulation to work at all. This is because the OS X kernel will only let you
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send SCSI commands to a writable device (for this problem to be solved, UAE
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would need to support a real SCSI emulation - the current implementation is
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simply a wrapper around a host SCSI device).
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The second problem is that the Finder does not like sharing a removable
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media device with any other application. For SCSI emulation to work, you
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must start UAE without a disc inserted in your CD or DVD writer. Otherwise,
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Finder will auto-mount the disc and not let UAE access the device. A
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different (more drastic) solution is to kill OS X's auto-mount daemon, but the
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procedure for doing this differs depending on which version of OS X you
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have. Somebody remind me to look this up and fill in the details here.
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The third problem is getting UAE to locate your CD or DVD writer. libscg on
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OS X (the SCSI transport layer which UAE uses) doesn't support bus-scanning
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on OS X. Only one device can currently be used with UAE, and you have to
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name it explicitly with the 'scsi_device=' option in your config file.
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For the first CD writer, this will be:
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scsi_device=IOCompactDiscServices/0
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For the first DVD writer, this will be
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scsi_device=IODVDServices/0
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Also remember to add the 'scsi=true' option to your config.
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If set up correctly, UAE will output something similar to the following when
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starting up:
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scsibus:0
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0,0,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,1,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,2,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,3,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,4,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,5,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,6,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,7,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,8,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,9,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,10,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,11,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,12,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,13,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,14,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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0,15,0 0 'YAMAHA ' 'CRW842S ' '1.0f' CD-ROM
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SCSIDEV: 16 devices found
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support_scsi = 1 support_ioctl = 0
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and then it'll complain a bit about being unable to get exclusive access and
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then it'll say
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(0,0,0) = uaescsi.device:0
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Okay. Don't look so worried. What's happening here is that UAE is trying to
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scan for SCSI devices, can't, and ends up finding the same device 16 times.
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Not very elegant, I know, but it works. I will tidy this up eventually. If
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Finder has an exclusive lock on your device because it has mounted a disc,
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UAE will just say 'Unable to get exclusive access to device' once and say:
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SCSIDEV: 0 devices found
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