On Tue, 2003-09-23 at 09:37, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > No, the design goal of "hot-pluggable" is that it indicates that > the device can disappear any moment. Nothing at all about SCSI > compliance.
Actually, then, these are two issues...hotplug is being worked on separately at the moment. I thought the problem under discussion was devices which lacked SCSI standards compliance. > Pulling out a device while it is actively reading or writing > will probably break something. But if a device is hot-pluggable > it should be OK to pull it out when it has been inactive for > a second or so. > > But if that is really true, then it should not be necessary > to send the device any "synchronise cache" commands when we > shut down. For a FC array, suprise unplug would be caveat emptor (possibly because fibre connection transience is going to cause it to come back), but notified unplug would still want to flush the cache on the assumption the next action might be to power down the array. James ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe, use the last form field at: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-usb-devel