* Do 1T1R for now, until we read the config out of ROM and use it.
* Disable turbo mode, I dunno what this is, but the linux drivers
have this disabled.
* Set the firmware endpoints to what we read from USB.
Tested:
* RTL8712 cut 3, STA mode
data queues.
This is similar to the openbsd and rtlwifi/r92su drivers.
Note: this driver still assumes it's a 4-endpoint device; I'll enforce
that in a follow-up commit.
There is an issue with interrupts at the moment, but it works with
polling mode set (hw.usb.xhci.use_polling=1).
Reviewed by: hselasky
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3665
This allows for arbitrary channel info to be placed in the input call rather
than the totally gross hack of overriding ic_curchan.
Without this I'm sure ic_curchan setting was racing with the scan code
setting the channel itself..
The firmware in this NIC sends management frames. So far I'm not sure which
ones it handles and which ones it doesn't handle - but this is what openbsd
does.
The association messages are handled by the firmware; the key negotiation
for 802.1x and WPA are done as raw frames, not management frames.
This successfully allows it to associate to my home networks whereas it didn't
work beforehand.
Tested:
* RTL8712, cut 3, STA mode
TODO:
* The firmware does send a join response with a status code; that should be
logged in a more obvious way to assist with debugging. Ie, the firmware
is the thing that is saying "couldn't join, sorry!", not net80211.
* yes, when a "sta disconnect" message comes through we should, like,
disconnect things. We're not currently generating beacon miss messages,
and net80211 isn't disconnecting things via software beacon miss receive.
Tested:
* RTL8712, cut 3, STA mode
* use an ath/iwn style debug bitmap - it's still global rather than per-device,
but it's better than debug levels
* disable bgscan - it just makes things unstable/unpredictable for now.
Tested:
* if_rsu - RTL8712 cut 3, STA mode
connectivity interact with the net80211 stack.
Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface,
just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of
the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the
wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as
"a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer
and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet
as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From
user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig
list, and user can't do anything useful with it.
Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only
KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details:
- The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc.
- Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like
the previous if_transmit.
- Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies
driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them
in promisc or allmulti state.
- Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method.
- Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when
driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific
interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters.
Details on interface configuration with new world order:
- A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change.
- /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change.
- List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is
now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl.
Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4),
that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing
changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann,
Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in
testing.
Reviewed by: adrian
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
intervals less than 250us was not handled properly. Add support for
high-bandwidth ISOCHRONOUS packets. USB webcams, USB audio and USB DVB
devices are expected to work better. High-bandwidth INTERRUPT
endpoints is not yet supported.
MFC after: 2 weeks
the kernel is tapping an USB transfer. This leads to a NULL pointer
access. The solution is to only trace while the USB bus lock is
locked.
MFC after: 2 weeks
like RPI-B and RPI-2.
Description of problem:
USB transfers can process data in their callbacks sometimes causing
unacceptable latency for other USB transfers. Separate BULK completion
callbacks from CONTROL, INTERRUPT and ISOCHRONOUS callbacks, and give
BULK completion callbacks lesser execution priority than the
others. This way USB audio won't be interfered by heavy USB ethernet
usage for example.
Further serve USB transfer completion in a round robin fashion,
instead of only serving the most CPU hungry. This has been done by
adding a third flag to USB transfer queue structure which keeps track
of looping callbacks. The "command" callback function then decides
what to do when looping.
MFC after: 2 weeks
* 286410
* 286413
* 286416
The initial commit broke a variety of debug and features that aren't
in the GENERIC kernels but are enabled in other platforms.
with the net80211 stack.
Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface,
just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of
the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the
wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as
"a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer
and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet
as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From
user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig
list, and user can't do anything useful with it.
Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only
KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details:
- The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc.
- Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like
the previous if_transmit.
- Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies
driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them
in promisc or allmulti state.
- Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method.
- Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when
driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific
interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters.
Details on interface configuration with new world order:
- A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change.
- /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change.
- List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is
now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl.
Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4),
that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing
changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@,
op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Details here:
https://wiki.freebsd.org/projects/ifnet/net80211
Still, drivers: ndis, wtap, mwl, ipw, bwn, wi, upgt, uath were not
tested. Changes to mwl, ipw, bwn, wi, upgt are trivial and chances
of problems are low. The wtap wasn't compilable even before this change.
But the ndis driver is complex, and it is likely to be broken with this
commit. Help with testing and debugging it is appreciated.
Differential Revision: D2655, D2740
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
Sponsored by: Netflix
The ftdi chip itself has a "get bitmode" command that doesn't actually
return the current bitmode, just a snapshot of the gpio lines. The chip
apparently has no way to provide the current bitmode.
This implements the functionality at the driver level. The driver starts
out assuming the chip is in UART mode (which it will be, coming out of
reset) and keeps track of every successful set-bitmode operation so that
it can always return the current mode with UFTDIIOC_GET_BITMODE.
Remove NAKing limit and pause IN and OUT transactions for 125us in
case of NAK response for BULK and CONTROL endpoints. This gets the
receive latency down and improves USB network throughput at the cost
of some CPU usage.
MFC after: 1 month
xhci_start_controller() to xhci_init(). These values don't change at run-
time so there's no point of acquiring them on every USB_HW_POWER_RESUME
instead of only once during initialization. In r276717, reading the first
couple of registers in question already had been moved as a prerequisite
for the changes in that revision.
- Identify ASMedia ASM1042A controllers.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
MFC after: 3 days
variant of Microsoft RNDIS, i. e. their unofficial version of CDC ACM,
has been disabled in r261544 for resolving a conflict with umodem(4).
Eventually, in r275790 that problem was dealt with in the right way.
However, r275790 failed to put probing of RNDIS devices in question
back.
- Initialize the device prior to querying it, as required by the RNDIS
specification. Otherwise already determining the MAC address may fail
rightfully.
- On detach, halt the device again.
- Use UCDC_SEND_ENCAPSULATED_{COMMAND,RESPONSE}. While these macros are
resolving to the same values as UR_{CLEAR_FEATURE,GET_STATUS}, the
former set is way more appropriate in this context.
- Report unknown - rather: unimplemented - events unconditionally and
not just in debug mode. This ensures that we'll get some hint of what
is going wrong instead of the driver silently failing.
- Deal with the Microsoft ActiveSync requirement of using an input buffer
the size of the expected reply or larger - except for variably sized
replies - when querying a device.
- Fix some pointless NULL checks, style bugs etc.
This changes allow urndis(4) to communicate with a Microsoft-certified
USB RNDIS test token.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: genua mbh
1) Use the TX FIFO empty interrupts to poll the transmit FIFO usage,
instead of using own software counters and waiting for SOF
interrupts. Assume that enough FIFO space is available to execute one
USB OUT transfer of any kind when the TX FIFO is empty.
2) Use the host channel halted event to asynchronously wait for host
channels to be disabled instead of waiting for SOF interrupts. This
results in less turnaround time for re-using host channels and at the
same time increases the performance.
The network transmit performance measured by "iperf" for the "RPi-B v1
2011/12" board, increased from 45MBit/s to 65Mbit/s after applying the
changes above.
No regressions seen using:
- High Speed (BULK, CONTROL, INTERRUPT)
- Full Speed (All transfer types)
- Low Speed (Control and Interrupt)
MFC after: 1 month
Submitted by: Daisuke Aoyama <aoyama@peach.ne.jp>
stage processing is only allowed after the setup complete event has
been received. Else a race may occur and the OUT data can be corrupted.
While at it ensure resetting a FIFO has the required wait loop.
MFC after: 3 days
interface without breaking ABI or API compatibility with existing drivers.
The existing data structures used to communicate between the kernel and
driver portions of PPS processing contain no spare/padding fields and no
flags field or other straightforward mechanism for communicating changes
in the structures or behaviors of the code. This makes it difficult to
MFC new features added to the PPS facility. ABI compatibility is
important; out-of-tree drivers in module form are known to exist. (Note
that the existing api_version field in the pps_params structure must
contain the value mandated by RFC 2783 and any RFCs that come along after.)
These changes introduce a pair of abi-version fields which are filled in
by the driver and the kernel respectively to indicate the interface
version. The driver sets its version field before calling the new
pps_init_abi() function. That lets the kernel know how much of the
pps_state structure is understood by the driver and it can avoid using
newer fields at the end of the structure that it knows about if the driver
is a lower version. The kernel fills in its version field during the init
call, letting the driver know what features and data the kernel supports.
To implement the new version information in a way that is backwards
compatible with code from before these changes, the high bit of the
lightly-used 'kcmode' field is repurposed as a flag bit that indicates the
driver is aware of the abi versioning scheme. Basically if this bit is
clear that indicates a "version 0" driver and if it is set the driver_abi
field indicates the version.
These changes also move the recently-added 'mtx' field of pps_state from
the middle to the end of the structure, and make the kernel code that uses
this field conditional on the driver being abi version 1 or higher. It
changes the only driver currently supplying the mtx field, usb_serial, to
use pps_init_abi().
Reviewed by: hselasky@
'BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT'. This allows bhyve's 'ppt' driver to claim ownership
of the device and pass it through to the guest.
In the common case where there are no competing drivers for USB controllers
this change is a no-op.
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 2 weeks
Previously, the driver was trying to blink the LED in the newstate
function, but that only gets called once (unlike OpenBSD's net80211
stack). Move the LED blinking to set_channel().
While there, don't try to set the channel when we switch to the SCAN
state. This is already accomplished by the set_channel() function.
MFC after: 1 week
been done by U-Boot. This allows the USB to work when we load the kernel
directly.
No dma sync is performed after these operations as the data we read/write
is not used by the cpu after the calls to the maimbox driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1940
Reviewed by: imp, Michal Meloun (meloun AT miracle.cz)
MFC after: 1 Week
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
when re-enumerating a FULL speed device. Else the wrong max packet
setting might be used when trying to re-enumerate a FULL speed device.
MFC after: 3 days
interrupt status bit. According to the UHCI controller specification
the host controller halted interrupt is non-maskable.
PR: 156596
Tested by: adrian @
MFC after: 1 week
has been removed and the driver has been greatly simplified and
optimised for FreeBSD. The driver is currently not built by default.
Requested by: Bruce Simpson <bms@fastmail.net>
allocations if only one element should be allocated per page
cache. Make one allocation per element compile time configurable. Fix
a comment while at it.
Suggested by: ian @
MFC after: 1 week
that we should use a normal-TRB if there are more TRBs extending the
data-stage TRB. Add a dedicated state bit to the internal USB transfer
flags to handle this case.
Reported by: Kohji Okuno <okuno.kohji@jp.panasonic.com>
MFC after: 1 week
every operation to retrieve the bs_cookie value almost nothing actually uses.
The bus_space struct contains a private data pointer (poorly named bs_cookie,
now renamed to bs_privdata) which is used only by a few old armv4 xscale
implementations. The bus_space functions were all defined to take this
value as the first parameter instead of the bus_space_tag_t, requiring all
the inline macro and function expansions to dereference the tag to pass it
to another function, which never uses it. Now all the functions take the tag
as the first parameter and retrieve the privdata if they need it.
Also fix a couple bus_space_unmap() implementations that were calling
kva_free() instead of pmap_unmapdev().
Discussed with: cognet
This makes Mac OS X happy when it returns back from suspending.
o Switch notify state after data is transferred, but not before.
o Consider there is also Super Speed mode.
o Do not set stall bit on any pipes in device mode as Mac OS X seems
don't support it.
In collaboration with: hselasky@
Required when communicating to Mac OS X USB host stack.
o Also don't set stall bit to TX pipe in device mode as seems Mac OS X
don't clears it as it should.
Discussed with: hselasky@
simultaneously detaching kernel drivers on the same USB device we can
get stuck in the "usb_wait_pending_ref_locked()" function because the
conditions needed for allowing detach are not met. The "destroy_dev()"
function waits for all system calls involving the given character
device to return. Character device system calls may lock the USB
enumeration lock, which is also held when "destroy_dev()" is
called. This can sometimes lead to a deadlock not noticed by
WITNESS. The current solution is to ensure the calling thread is the
only one holding the USB enumeration lock and prevent other threads
from getting refs while a USB device detach is ongoing. This turned
out not to be sufficient. To solve this deadlock we could use
"destroy_dev_sched()" to schedule the device destruction in the
background, but then we don't know when it is safe to free() the
private data of the character device. Instead a callback function is
executed by the USB explore process to kill off any leftover USB
character devices synchronously after the USB device explore code is
finished and the USB enumeration lock is no longer locked. This makes
porting easier and also ensures us that character devices must
eventually go away after a USB device detach.
While at it ensure that "flag_iserror" is only written when "priv_mtx"
is locked, which is protecting it.
MFC after: 5 days
devices which don't support the synchronize cache SCSI command are
likely to also not support the prevent-allow medium removal SCSI
command.
PR: 185747
MFC after: 1 week
socket-buffer implementations, introduce a return value for MCLGET()
(and m_cljget() that underlies it) to allow the caller to avoid testing
M_EXT itself. Update all callers to use the return value.
With this change, very few network device drivers remain aware of
M_EXT; the primary exceptions lie in mbuf-chain pretty printers for
debugging, and in a few cases, custom mbuf and cluster allocation
implementations.
NB: This is a difficult-to-test change as it touches many drivers for
which I don't have physical devices. Instead we've gone for intensive
review, but further post-commit review would definitely be appreciated
to spot errors where changes could not easily be made mechanically,
but were largely mechanical in nature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1440
Reviewed by: adrian, bz, gnn
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
scatter-gather XHCI TRB entries for its payload data. The XHCI
controller can handle at least 65536 bytes per scatter-gather list
entry.
MFC after: 1 week
Suggested by: Kohji Okuno <okuno.kohji@jp.panasonic.com>
is called from "xhci_configure_reset_endpoint()". Ensure the 3-strikes
error feature is always enabled except for ISOCHRONOUS transfers.
MFC after: 1 week
Suggested by: marius@
- Simplify MSI allocation to what is actually needed for a single one.
- Release the MSI and the corresponding bus resource as appropriate when
either the interrupt resource cannot be allocated or setting up the
interrupt fails.
- Error out when interrupt allocation or setup fails and polling is
disabled.
- Release the MSI after the corresponding bus resource so the former is
not leaked on detach.
- Remove a redundant softc member.
MFC after: 3 days
re-using a hardware propritary transfer descriptor, PTD, in USB host
mode. If the PTD's are recycled too quickly, it has been observed that
the hardware simply fails to schedule the requested job or resets
completely disconnecting all devices.
SAF1761 OTG driver. Currently the driver logic is very simple and
double buffering the USB transactions is not done. Also you need to
use an external USB high speed USB HUB for reliable FULL speed
outgoing ISOCHRONOUS traffic, because the internal one chokes on
so-called split transfers above 188 bytes.
search (i.e. without returning any result) and you would end up with a
random MAC address.
Change the search algorithm to a recursive one to ensure that all the nodes
on DTS will be verified.
The previous algorithm could not keep up if the DTS has too many sub-nodes.
While here, fix the punctuation on comments.
the r241987 commit message, instead of having users locally overriding
the value using tunables in /boot/loader.conf .
Found by: Adam Parco
Discussed with: Nick Hibma
E5372 with different product IDs.
Interestingly, the standard E5372 IDs (12d1:1506) are currently listed in
u3g.c and are the same as the E3131. However, the R215/E5372 is an NCM
device and works well with cdce(4) whereas the E3131 isn't. More work
may be needed to better identify the other device IDs.
MFC after: 1 week
ports. The current bitmap array was too small to hold more than 16
bits and would at some point toggle the context size, which then would
trigger an enumeration fault and cause a fallback to the EHCI
companion controller, if any.
MFC after: 3 days
Huawei. It might appear as if the firmware is allocating memory blocks
according to the USB transfer size and if there is initially a lot of
data, like at the answering machine prompt, it simply dies without any
apparent reason. The simple workaround for this is to force a zero
length packet at hardware level after every 512 bytes of data. This
will force the other side to use smaller memory blocks aswell.
MFC after: 1 week
- Cleanup some register reads and writes to use existing register
access macros.
- Ensure code which only applies to the control endpoint is not run
for other endpoints in the data transfer path.
MFC after: 3 days
ethernet class.
Note: This is untested as I do not have a device like this. That is
reflected in the MFC timeout.
PR: 192345
Submitted by: rozhuk.im gmail.com
MFC after: 4 weeks
USB 2.0 port mask in addition to the USB 3.0 port mask. The hardware
does not always accept when writing -1U to the port switching
registers.
MFC after: 3 days
Tested by: Huang Wen Hui <huanghwh@gmail.com>
- Remove 4 extra bytes from the ethernet payload.
- The maximum RX buffer was incorrectly set. Increase it to 64K for
now, until the exact limit is understood.
- Enable hardware checksumming again.
- Make hardware data structure packed.
MFC after: 3 days
- Don't discard frames if the dropped or error flag is set.
- Don't remove the last 4-bytes of every packet.
- Add extra range check for data position offset when receiving data.
MFC after: 1 day
PR: 191432
rules prevent the USB serial module to be unloaded before any client
modules. This patch ensures that the "ucom_mtx" mutex is destroyed
last when doing a system uninit in a monotolith build aswell.
MFC after: 3 days
These changes prevent sysctl(8) from returning proper output,
such as:
1) no output from sysctl(8)
2) erroneously returning ENOMEM with tools like truss(1)
or uname(1)
truss: can not get etype: Cannot allocate memory
there is an environment variable which shall initialize the SYSCTL
during early boot. This works for all SYSCTL types both statically and
dynamically created ones, except for the SYSCTL NODE type and SYSCTLs
which belong to VNETs. A new flag, CTLFLAG_NOFETCH, has been added to
be used in the case a tunable sysctl has a custom initialisation
function allowing the sysctl to still be marked as a tunable. The
kernel SYSCTL API is mostly the same, with a few exceptions for some
special operations like iterating childrens of a static/extern SYSCTL
node. This operation should probably be made into a factored out
common macro, hence some device drivers use this. The reason for
changing the SYSCTL API was the need for a SYSCTL parent OID pointer
and not only the SYSCTL parent OID list pointer in order to quickly
generate the sysctl path. The motivation behind this patch is to avoid
parameter loading cludges inside the OFED driver subsystem. Instead of
adding special code to the OFED driver subsystem to post-load tunables
into dynamically created sysctls, we generalize this in the kernel.
Other changes:
- Corrected a possibly incorrect sysctl name from "hw.cbb.intr_mask"
to "hw.pcic.intr_mask".
- Removed redundant TUNABLE statements throughout the kernel.
- Some minor code rewrites in connection to removing not needed
TUNABLE statements.
- Added a missing SYSCTL_DECL().
- Wrapped two very long lines.
- Avoid malloc()/free() inside sysctl string handling, in case it is
called to initialize a sysctl from a tunable, hence malloc()/free() is
not ready when sysctls from the sysctl dataset are registered.
- Bumped FreeBSD version to indicate SYSCTL API change.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
shutdown by putting the former under !rebooting and turning the latter into
debug messages.
Reviewed by: hps
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Bally Wulff Games & Entertainment GmbH
on USB HUBs by moving the code into the USB explore threads. The
deadlock happens because child devices of the USB HUB don't have the
expected reference count when called from outside the explore
thread. Only the HUB device itself, which the IOCTL interface locks,
gets the correct reference count.
MFC after: 3 days
- Revert r265427. It appears we are halting the DWC OTG host
controller schedule if we process events only at every SOF. When doing
split transactions we rely on that events are processed quickly and
waiting too long might cause data loss.
- We are not always able to meet the timing requirements of interrupt
endpoint split transactions. Switch from INTERRUPT to CONTROL endpoint
type for interrupt endpoint events until further, hence CONTROL
endpoint events are more relaxed, reducing the chance of data
loss. See comment in code for more in-depth explanation.
- Simplify TT scheduling.
MFC after: 3 days
- Remove double buffering interrupt and isochronous traffic via the
transaction translator. It can be avoided because the DWC OTG will
always delay the start split transactions for interrupt and
isochronous traffic, but will not delay the complete split
transactions, if we set the odd frame bit correctly.
- Need to check the transfer cache field in the device done function
to be sure all allocated channels are freed and not the transfer first
one. This seems to resolve the control endpoint transfer type quirk
which is now removed.
- Make sure any received data upon TX is dumped else RX path will
stop.
- Transmit isochronous data before receiving isochronous data as a
means to optimise the TT schedule.
- Implement a simple TT bandwidth scheduler.
- Cleanup use of old "td->error" variable.
- On interrupt IN traffic via the transaction translator we simply
ignore missed transfer opportunities and silently retry the
transaction upon next available time slot.
MFC after: 3 days
- Properly align temporary buffer to 32-bit.
- Add an extra parenthesis to make expression clear.
- Range check the association ID received from hardware.
MFC after: 1 week
- The R92S_TCR register is an 8-bit register. Don't access it like a
16-bit register.
- Disable parsing the delete station event, due to many false events.
- Ensure that there is only one transfer queue for each endpoint, so
that packets transmitted don't get out of order.
MFC after: 1 week
- Update FDT file for BERI DE4 boards.
- Add needed kernel configuration keywords.
- Rename module to saf1761otg so that the device unit number does not
interfere with the hardware ID in dmesg.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
- Use an interrupt filter for handling the data path interrupts. This
increases the throughput significantly.
- Implement support for USB suspend and resume in USB host mode.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
- Make the USB hardware skip PTDs which are not allocated.
- Peek host memory twice. Sometimes the PTD status is incorrectly
returned as zero.
- Ensure the host channel is always freed when software TD
is completing.
- Add correct configuration of interrupt polarity and type.
- Set CERR to 2 for asynchronous traffic to avoid having to
reactivate the PTD when a NAK token is received.
- Fix detection of STALL PID.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
- Put "_LE_" into the register access macros to indicate little endian
byte order is expected by the hardware.
- Avoid using the bounce buffer when not strictly needed. Try to move
data directly using bus-space functions first.
- Ensure we preserve the reserved bits in the power down mode
register. Else the hardware goes into a non-recoverable state.
- Always use 32-bit access when writing or reading registers or FIFOs,
because the hardware is 32-bit oriented and don't really understand 8-
and 16-bit access.
- Correct writes to the memory address register. There is no need to
shift the register offset.
- Correct interval for interrupt endpoints.
- Optimise 90ns internal memory buffer read delay.
- Rename PDT into PTD, which is how the datasheet writes it.
- Add missing programming for activating host controller PTDs.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
direction isochronous transfers.
- Remove setting of fields which does not belong to the respective
TRBs. These fields are currently set as zero and this is more a
cosmetic change.
MFC after: 3 days
Submitted by: Horse Ma <HMa@wyse.com>
- Make sure TX/RX lists don't leak and are only allocated once.
- Fix off-by one transfer index computation.
- Give firmware loading more time.
MFC after: 3 days
be a race when using a single active queue for all transmit types.
- Last argument of usb_pause_mtx() is ticks and not milliseconds.
- Remove unused watchdog.
- Remove some unused fields from the RSU softc structure.
- Workaround usbd_transfer_start() recursion from inside of completion
callback.
MFC after: 3 days
- Need to set the pre-fetch memory address when reading the host memory.
- We currently assume that no endianness conversion is needed.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
- Implement support for interrupt filters in the DWC OTG driver, to
reduce the amount of CPU task switching when only feeding the FIFOs.
- Add common spinlock to the USB bus structure.
MFC after: 2 weeks
the main processing queue, clear the NAK counter for any associated
BULK or CONTROL transfers and poll the endpoint(s) for 1 millisecond
at 125us rate interval, before going into slow, 10ms, NAK polling mode
again. This has the effect that typical ping-ping protocols respond
quicker when initiated from the USB host.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- For non-periodic traffic we only need to wait two SOFs before
disabling the channel.
- Make sure we release the TX FIFO tracking level after the host
channel is disabled.
- Make sure the host channel state gets reset/disabled initially.
- Two minor code style changes.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Rework how we allocate and free USB host channels, so that we only
allocate a channel if there is a real packet going out on the USB
cable.
- Use BULK type for control data and status, due to instabilities in
the HW it appears.
- Split FIFO TX levels into one for the periodic FIFO and one for the
non-periodic FIFO.
- Use correct HFNUM mask when scheduling host transactions. The HFNUM
register does not count the full 16-bit range.
- Correct START/COMPLETION slot for TT transactions. For INTERRUPT and
ISOCHRONOUS type transactions the hardware always respects the ODDFRM
bit, which means we need to allocate multiple host channels when
processing such endpoints, to not miss any so-called complete split
opportunities.
- When doing ISOCHRONOUS OUT transfers through a TT send all data
payload in a single ALL-burst. This deacreases the likelyhood for
isochronous data underruns.
- Fixed unbalanced unlock in case of "dwc_otg_init_fifo()" failure.
- Increase interrupt priority.
MFC after: 2 weeks
controller driver by piggybacking the SOF interrupt when issuing new
and checking old transfers. Number of interrupts was reduced by 30%
when doing Isochronous transfers.
Use correct GINTMSK_XXX macros when accessing the DWC OTG interrupt
mask register.
Add code to adjust the frame interval register which influences the
SOF rate.
MFC after: 2 weeks
speed data traffic going directly to a USB device or through a
so-called USB transaction translator.
Add checks that we are not overusing the TX FIFO.
MFC after: 2 weeks
define a few imx_ccm_foo() functions that are implemented by the imx51 or
imx6 ccm code. Of course, the imx6 ccm code is still more a wish than
reality, so for now its implementations just return hard-coded numbers.
a jtag debugging product, which was used on early Beaglebone boards (later
boards used a standard FTDI 2232C product ID). Change the name accordingly,
and also add an entry for XDS100V3, the latest version of that product
which has its own new product ID number.
Device type and revision is now determined from the bcdDevice field and
doesn't need to be in the table at all. The feature that skips creation
of /dev/ttyU* entries for jtag and gpio interfaces is enhanced:
- The feature is now optional, but enabled by default. A tunable and
sysctl are available to control it: hw.usb.uftdi.skip_jtag_interfaces.
- We no longer assume interface #0 is the only jtag interface. Up to
eight interfaces per chip can be flagged as jtag. (Current ftdi chips
support a max of 4 interfaces; this leaves room for growth.)
- Some manufacturers don't change the product ID or use the same ID for
different devices intended for both serial-comms and jtag/gpio use.
Often while the product ID is the same, the product name string is
different, so it's now possible to search for the product name in a
table of strings and get the set of non-tty interfaces from that table.
- Add a comment about FTDI and ZLPs.
- Correctly check odditiy of baud rate divisor.
- Correct IOCTL handling for "error" and "event" char.
MFC after: 1 weeks
other modes supported by the FTDI serial adapter chips.
In addition to adding the new ioctls, this change removes all the code
that reset the chip at attach and open/close time, and also the code
that turned on RTS/CTS flow control on open without any permission to do
so (that was just always a bug in the driver).
When FTDI chips are configured as GPIO or MPSSE or other special-purpose
uses by an attached serial eeprom, the chip will power on with certain
pins driven or floating, and it's important that the driver not do
anything to the chip to perturb that unless it receives a specific
command to do so. When used for "plain old serial comms" the chip
powers on into the right mode and never needs to be reset while it's
running to operate properly, so this change is transparent to most users.
While I'm here, remove aue_eeprom_getword() as its only usage is to
read station address and make it more readable. This change is
inspired by NetBSD.
With this change, aue(4) should work on big endian architectures.
PR: 188177
default wMaxPacketSize (64 or 512 bytes). This actually helps older FTDI
devices (which were USB 1/full speed) more than the new H-series high
speed, but even for the new chips it helps cut the number of interrupts
when doing very high speed (3-12mbaud).
Recent FDTI chips have the ability to operate at up to 12mbps. The newer
chips with faster clocks have the same usb vendor/product IDs as the older
chips; the bcdDevice field must be used to detect the newer versions. This
change includes a new function to do that instead of using just the IDs from
the vendor/product table.
The code to choose the baud clock divisor is completely rewritten. In
addition to supporting the new higher clock rates, the rewrite fixes a
longstanding bug in the old code which put the high bits of the fractional
part of the divisor into the wrong place in the wIndex field. That bug
was mostly harmless -- it accidentally didn't affect standard baud rates
and would only show up when using relatively fast non-standard rates.
create character devices. The deadlock can happen if an application is
issuing IOCTLs which require USB refcounting, at the same time the USB
device is detaching.
There is already a counter in place in the USB device structure to
detect this situation, but it was not always checked ahead of invoking
functions that might destroy character devices, like detach, set
configuration, set alternate interface or detach active kernel driver.
Reported by: Daniel O'Connor <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
MFC after: 1 week
The NetBSD Foundation states "Third parties are encouraged to change the
license on any files which have a 4-clause license contributed to the
NetBSD Foundation to a 2-clause license."
This change removes clauses 3 and 4 from copyright / license blocks that
list The NetBSD Foundation as the only copyright holder.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
1) Add support for page back/forward.
2) While doing HOR scrolling, disable VER scrolling.
3) Checking dx_sum and dy_sum before emulate right button, this can
avoids unexpected right button press.
4) Fix stable pointer operation when emulating middle button.
Submitted by: Huang Wen Hui <huanghwh@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Support for double-tap and drag.
- Support for 2-finger horizontal scrolling which translates to page-back/forward events.
- Single finger tap is equivalent to a left-button press.
- Two-finger taps are mapped to the right-button click.
- Three fingers are mapped to middle button.
- Add sysctl to disable single finger tapping.
- Fix for multiple open of /dev/atp0
- Enhanced support for the Fountain/Geyser family by adding Geyser4.
- Update manual page.
Submitted by: Rohit Grover <rgrover1@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Before this patch, curvnet was NULL.
When the VIMAGE kernel option is enabled, this eliminates
kernel panics when USB ethernet devices are plugged in.
PR: 183835
Submitted by: Hiroo Oono <hiroo.ono at gmail dot com>
about uss820dci_odevd being unused, by adding it to the part that
handles getting descriptors.
Reported by: loos
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 3 days
- Get USB input report length from HID descriptor.
- Use 1 finger TAP for devices which has no integrated button.
- Move data buffer to softc instead of allocating it.
MFC after: 1 week
should fix DMA descriptor caching issues seen with the EHCI controller
found in Google Chromebook C720 during removal and insertion of USB
devices.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Matthew Dillon at DragonFlyBSD
Useful for so-called USB tethering.
- Imported code from OpenBSD
- Adapted code to FreeBSD
- Removed some unused functions
- Fixed some buffer encoding and decoding issues
- Optimised data transport path a bit, by sending multiple packets at a time
- Increased receive buffer to 16K
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Requested by: eadler @
MFC after: 2 weeks
to check the status property in their probe routines.
Simplebus used to only instantiate its children whose status="okay"
but that was improper behavior, fixed in r261352. Now that it doesn't
check anymore and probes all its children; the children all have to
do the check because really only the children know how to properly
interpret their status property strings.
Right now all existing drivers only understand "okay" versus something-
that's-not-okay, so they all use the new ofw_bus_status_okay() helper.
- Use system provided functions for HID report requests.
- Nice the mode setting, because the USB hardware does appear to
handle the commands right away.
MFC after: 1 week