This seems to indicate whether to program the NIC for fractional 5ghz
mode (ie, 5mhz spaced channels, rather than 10 or 20mhz spacing) or not.
The default (0) seems to mean "only program fractional mode if needed".
A different value (eg 1) seems to always enable fractional 5ghz mode
regardless of the frequency.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
Calibration/PCI data that's written to flash (rather than EEPROM attached
to the NIC) is typically already in host-endian. The existing checks
end up swapping 16 bit words incorrectly - the correct solution would be
to read the magic value and determine the EEPROM endianness from that.
(This is what Linux does.)
This doesn't completely enable embedded use of the AR9285/AR9287 -
notably, the EEPROM read methods need to be made generic and available
to all EEPROM drivers. I'll worry about that later.
Approved by: re (kib)
* I messed up the order of parameter true/false; oops!
* AR_PHY_RADAR_1 was being written at the wrong place, and was writing
potential garbage to the hardware.
Approved by: re (kib)
* Teach the AR5212/AR5416 ANI code to use the RX filter methods, rather
than calling the RX filter routines directly.
* Make HAL_ANI_PRESENT and HAL_ANI_MODE unconditionally available,
regardless of whether ah_ani_function is masking it.
* (Mostly) fully disable ANI if interference mitigation is disabled.
When disabled, the ANI code doesn't touch any ANI/PHY registers,
leaving them the default value. This is in line with what the
Atheros reference driver does.
* Correctly set the ANI parameters during ANI reset, rather than
when ANI is enabled. In this way, if ANI is disabled or enabled
whilst the NIC is not active (and there's no current channel),
bogus parameters or a NULL pointer deference doesn't occur.
There's still some lingering issues - notably, the MIB events/interrupts
aren't fully disabled, so MIB interrupts still occur. I'll worry about
that later.
Approved by: re (kib)
This in particular fixes radar PHY handling - on the AR5212
NIC, one enables the AR_PHY_ERR_RADAR bit in AR_PHY_ERR;
the AR5416 and later also needs a bit set in AR_RX_FILTER.
A follow-up commit is needed to convert the AR5416 ANI code
to use this particular method, as it's currently using the
AR5212 methods directly.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
the ADC calibrations if the NIC is in 5ghz 11a or 5ghz HT/20 modes.
I've been told that the dual-ADC is only engaged in turbo/40mhz modes.
Since Sowl (AR9160) seems to return valid-looking calibration data
in 5ghz 20MHz modes, I'm only disabling it for Merlin for now.
It may turn out I can disable it for all chipsets and only enable
it for 40MHz modes.
Approved by: re (kib)
It looks like this was mixed up with the AR9285 calibration code.
This code is now more in line with what Linux ath9k and Atheros
reference drivers do.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
Although this may not be what the original sysctl was designed to do,
it feels a bit more "expected".
Before, if ANI is disabled, the initial ANI parameters are still written
to the hardware, even if they're not enabled. "ANI enabled" would then
adjust the noise immunity parameters dynamically. Disabling ANI would
simply leave the existing noise immunity parameters where they are,
and disable the dynamic part.
The problem is that disabling ANI doesn't leave the hardware in
a consistent, predictable state - so asking a user to disable ANI
wouldn't actually reset the NIC to a consistent set of PHY signal
detection parameters, resulting in an unpredictable/unreliable outcome.
This makes it difficult to get reliable debugging information from
the user.
Approved by: re (kib)
coordinates, such as digitizers and touch-screens, leaving these devices
to uhid(4) and user-level. Specially patched xf86-input-mouse driver can
handle them, that isn't done and can't be done properly with ums(4)
because of mouse(4) protocol limitations.
Approved by: re (kib)
Slot field of the PxCMD register may point to an empty command slot.
That breaks command timeout detection logic, making impossible to find
what command actually caused timeout, and leading to infinite wait.
Workaround that by checking whether pointed command slot is really used
and can timeout in its time. And if not, fallback to the dumb algorithm
used with FBS -- let all commands to time out and then fail all of them.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
the right SIM in case the HBA is RAID-capable but the target in question is
not a hot spare or member of a RAID volume.
- Report the loss and addition of SAS and SATA targets detected via PHY link
status changes and signalled by MPI_EVENT_SAS_DEVICE_STATUS_CHANGE to cam(4)
as lost devices and trigger rescans as appropriate. Without this it can take
quite some time until a lost device actually is no longer tried to be used,
if it ever stops. [1]
- Handle MPI_EVENT_IR2, MPI_EVENT_LOG_ENTRY_ADDED, MPI_EVENT_SAS_DISCOVERY
and MPI_EVENT_SAS_PHY_LINK_STATUS silently as these serve no additional
purpose beyond adding cryptic entries to logs.
Thanks to Hans-Joerg Sirtl for providing one of the HBAs these changes were
developed with and RIP to the mainboard that didn't survive testing them.
PR: 157534 [1]
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Sprinkle some const where appropriate.
- Consistently use target_id_t for the target parameter of mpt_map_physdisk()
and mpt_is_raid_volume().
- Fix some whitespace bugs.
Approved by: re (kib)
accessing SATA registers. Unserialized access under heavy load caused
wrong speed reporting and potentially could cause device loss.
- To free memory and other resources (including above), allocated
during chipinit() method call on attach, add new chipdeinit() method,
called during driver detach.
Submitted by: Andrew Boyer <aboyer@averesystems.com> (initial version)
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
Since no actual radar data is ever handled, this won't
do anything. It's mostly here as a reference for those who
wish to experiment with radar detection.
Approved by: re (kib)
the resource covers the entire range. Some BIOSes appear to mark
endpoints as non-fixed incorrectly (non-fixed endpoints are supposed to
be used in _PRS when OSPM is allowed to allocate a certain chunk of
address space within a larger range, I don't believe it is supposed to be
used for _CRS).
Approved by: re (kib)
ioctl interface for DFS modules to use.
Since there's no open source dfs code yet, this doesn't introduce any
operational changes.
Approved by: re (kib)
tools.
* introduce pe_enabled, which (will) indicate whether the radar
detection stuff is enabled or not. Right now it's incorrectly
set, based on something previously written. I'll sort it out
later.
* Don't set HAL_PHYERR_PARAM_ENABLE in pe_relstep to say whether
radar detection is on.
* Return whether blockradar, fir128 and enmaxrssi is enabled.
* Change some of the phyerr params to be integers rather than
HAL_BOOL so they can be set to the NOPARAM value when the
setup function is called. This is in line with other radar
parameters.
* Add new configuration parameters for fir128, blockradar and
enmaxrssi, rather than defaulting to off, on and on respectively.
Approved by: re (kib)
polluting the AR5416 code with later chipset support.
Note: ar9280InitPLL() supports Merlin (AR9280) and later (AR9285, AR9287.)
Submitted by: ssgriffonuser@gmail.com
Approved by: re (kib)
These should be disabled for the AR5416 in hostap/mesh/ibss mode,
as the AR5416 doesn't have support for radar detection on the
ext channel of a HT40 setup. Later chips do.
Approved by: re (kib)
reference driver.
* Australia should use FCC3_WORLD
* Add some new SKUs; these are just the EEPROM values and haven't been
fully defined yet. As such they won't affect anything.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
unknown reason Apple UniNorth2 gem(4) device required manual
interface down/up operation after r222135. Even though this is not
correct thing and I don't like to revert it but it would be better
than breaking gem(4) on PPC. This should be revisited.
PR: kern/157405
Back in 2009 I changed the ABI of the GIO_KEYMAP and PIO_KEYMAP ioctls
to support wide characters. I created a patch to add ABI compatibility
for the old calls, but I didn't get any feedback to that.
It seems now people are upgrading from 8 to 9 they experience this
issue, so add it anyway.
resource allocation on x86 platforms:
- Add a new helper API that Host-PCI bridge drivers can use to restrict
resource allocation requests to a set of address ranges for different
resource types.
- For the ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver, use Producer address range resources
in _CRS to enumerate valid address ranges for a given Host-PCI bridge.
This can be disabled by including "hostres" in the debug.acpi.disabled
tunable.
- For the MPTable Host-PCI bridge driver, use entries in the extended
MPTable to determine the valid address ranges for a given Host-PCI
bridge. This required adding code to parse extended table entries.
Similar to the new PCI-PCI bridge driver, these changes are only enabled
if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled (which is enabled by default on
amd64 and i386).
Approved by: re (kib)
This was removed accidentally when the per HAL instance
code was added, and not reverted when I added back the
global debug variable (for early chip setup debugging.)
supports IPv4/IPv6 checksum offloading and VLAN tag insertion/
stripping as well as WOL. Because uether does not provide a way
to announce driver specific offload capabilities to upper stack,
checksum offloading support needs more work and will be done in
future.
Special thanks to ASIX for donating sample hardware.
H/W donated by: ASIX Electronics
Reviewed by: hselasky
system timer is stopped during shutdown and that the pause() statement in ukbd
causes infinite hang in this regard. The fix is to use mi_switch() instead of
pause() to do the required task switch to ensure that the required USB processes
get executed.
Reported by: Mike_Karels@mcafee.com
MFC after: 1 week
checking IFF_DRV_RUNNING and simplify the code. This also involves holding
the driver lock in the rx_ch callout.
- Just use ifp instead of sc->sc_ifp.
Submitted by: jhb (mostly)
allowing their use to be disabled via device hints though). This matches
what the corresponding Linux driver provided by LSI does. Tested with
SAS1064.
- There's no need to keep track of the RIDs used.
- Don't allocate MSI/MSI-X as RF_SHAREABLE.
- Remove a comment which no longer applies since r209599.
- Assign NULL rather than 0 to pointers.
MFC after: 1 month
bridge is blacklisted. In that case just return from pci_alloc_msix_method(),
otherwise we continue without a single MSI-X resource, causing subsequent
attempts to use the seemingly available resource to fail or when booting
verbose a NULL-pointer dereference of rle->start when trying to print the
IRQ in pci_alloc_msix_method().
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
- Consistently use the newly introduced sc_mac_rxcfg throughout the driver
instead of reading the old content of CAS_MAC_RX_CONF.
- Increment if_iqdrops instead of if_ierrors in case of RX buffer allocation
failure.
- According to the Cassini datasheet the RX MAC should also be disabled in
cas_setladrf() before changing its configuration.
- Add error messages to gem_disable_{r,t}x() and take advantage of these
throughout the driver instead of duplicating their functionality all over
the place.
sets GEM_MAC_RX_CONFIG based on sc_mac_rxcfg which in turn is initialized
to zero, before reading the supposedly default configuration we were
effectively not basing sc_mac_rxcfg and thus GEM_MAC_RX_CONFIG on the
default configuration. Solve this by calling gem_setladrf() after reading
in the default configuration of GEM_MAC_RX_CONFIG. This also avoids the
need to distinguish whether gem_setladrf() should enable the RX MAC again
and should be slightly more correct as we're now doing all of the RX MAC
configuration in the intended step.
setting (either default or if supported as set by SIOCSIFFIB, e.g.
from ifconfig).
Submitted by: Alexander V. Chernikov (melifaro ipfw.ru)
Reviewed by: julian
MFC after: 2 weeks
em drivers.
- Make the per-instance 'enable_aim' sysctl truly per-instance by having it
change a per-instance variable (which is used to control AIM) rather
than having all of the per-instance sysctls operate on a single global
variable.
Reviewed by: jfv (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
the AP doesn't transmit beacons.
If the AP requests a CSA (ie, a channel switch) and then enters CAC
(channel availability check) for 60 seconds, it doesn't send beacons
and it just listens for radar events (and other things which we don't
do yet.)
Now, ath_newstate() was not resetting the beacon timer config on
a transition to the RUN state when in STA mode - it was setting
sc_syncbeacon, which simply updates the beacon config from the
contents of the next received beacon.
This means the STA never generates beacon miss events.
If the AP goes into CAC for 60 seconds and recovers, the STA will
happily receive the first beacon and reconfigure timers.
But if it gets a radar event after that, it'll change channel
again, not notify the station that it's changed channel..
and since the station is happily waiting for the first beacon
to configure the beacon timer details from, it won't ever
generate a beacon miss interrupt and it'll sit there forever
(or until the AP appears on that channel once again.)
This change forces the last known beacon timer config to be
written to hardware on a transition from CSA->RUN in STA mode.
This forces bmiss events to occur and the STA will eventually
(after a handful of beacon miss events) begin scanning for
another access point.
get it out of a stuck condition that can be caused by GEM_MAC_RX_OVERFLOW.
- In gem_reset_rxdma() call gem_setladrf() in order to reprogram the RX
filter and restore the previous content of GEM_MAC_RX_CONFIG. While at it
consistently use the newly introduced sc_mac_rxcfg throughout the driver
instead of reading the its old content.
- Increment if_iqdrops instead of if_ierrors in case of RX buffer allocation
failure.
- According to the GEM datasheet the RX MAC should also be disabled in
gem_setladrf() before changing its configuration.
- Add error messages to gem_disable_{r,t}x() and take advantage of these
throughout the driver instead of duplicating their functionality all over
the place.
In joint forces with: yongari
the microcode caused SCB timeouts. Linux driver does not allow
microcode loading for these controllers and jfv also confirmed that
there is no need to do and it shouldn't.
PR: kern/103332
Additional confirmation from: jfv
MFC after: 1 week
The DFS code was tickling the channel set directly whilst going
through the state RUN -> CSA -> RUN. This only changed the channel;
it didn't go via ath_reset(). However in this driver, a channel
change always causes a chip reset, which resets the beacon timer
configuration and interrupt setup. This meant that data would go
out but as the beacon timers never fired, beacons would never
be queued.
The confusing part is that sometimes the state transition was
RUN -> SCAN -> CAC -> RUN (with CSA being in there sometimes);
going via SCAN would clear sc_beacons and thus the transition
to RUN would reprogram beacon transmission.
In case someone tries debugging why suspending a device currently
beaconing (versus just RX'ing beacons which is what occurs in STA
mode), add a silly comment which should hopefully land them at
this commit message. The call to ath_hal_reset() will be clearing
the beacon config and it may not be always reset.
can be tested.
This doesn't at all actually do radar detection! It's just
so developers who wish to test the net80211 DFS code can easily
do so. Without this flag, the DFS channels are never marked
DFS and thus the DFS stuff doesn't run.
latter.
It appears that the addition to uath(4) came in through PR kern/135009,
which had tested another device, the SMCWUSBTG2, successfully with uath(4)
and included the SMCWUSBG as it "has the same chipset". I can find no
other evidence that these two do actually share the same chipset. Moreover,
Linux treats the SMCWUSBG as a zyd(4) device also.
This reverts r223537.
Discussed with: hselasky, kevlo
MFC after: 1 week
LED controller used to run the load graph on the server's front panel.
Reported by: Paul Mather <paul at gromit dot dlib dot vt dot edu>
MFC after: 3 days
dynamically loaded device drivers get a chance to run their event hooks.
- Decouple the USB suspend and resume lock from witness. It produces some
false warnings due to reusing the lock name among multiple devices.
MFC after: 3 days
is now required by bus_autoconf.
- Allow interface class matching even if device class is vendor specific.
- Update bus_autoconf tool to not generate system and subsystem match lines
for the nomatch event.
PR: misc/157903
MFC after: 14 days
sorted according to the mode which they support:
host, device or dual mode
- Add generic tool to extract these data:
tools/bus_autoconf
Discussed with: imp
Suggested by: Robert Millan <rmh@debian.org>
PR: misc/157903
MFC after: 14 days
to do about the few cases where the HAL state isn't available (regdomain)
or isn't yet setup (probe/attach.)
The global ath_hal_debug now affects all instances of the HAL.
This also restores the ability for probe/attach debugging to work; as
the sysctl tree may not be attached at that point. Users can just set
the global "hw.ath.hal.debug" to a suitable value to enable probe/attach
related debugging.
rather than global variables.
This specifically allows for debugging to be enabled per-NIC, rather
than globally.
Since the ath driver doesn't know about AH_DEBUG, and to keep the ABI
consistent regardless of whether AH_DEBUG is enabled or not, enable the
debug parameter always but only conditionally compile in the debug
methods if needed.
The ALQ support is currently still global pending some brainstorming.
Submitted by: ssgriffonuser@gmail.com
Reviewed by: adrian, bschmidt
processors unless the invariant TSC bit of CPUID is set. Intel processors
may stop incrementing TSC when DPSLP# pin is asserted, according to Intel
processor manuals, i. e., TSC timecounter is useless if the processor can
enter deep sleep state (C3/C4). This problem was accidentally uncovered by
r222869, which increased timecounter quality of P-state invariant TSC, e.g.,
for Core2 Duo T5870 (Family 6, Model f) and Atom N270 (Family 6, Model 1c).
Reported by: Fabian Keil (freebsd-listen at fabiankeil dot de)
Ian FREISLICH (ianf at clue dot co dot za)
Tested by: Fabian Keil (freebsd-listen at fabiankeil dot de)
- Core2 Duo T5870 (C3 state available/enabled)
jkim - Xeon X5150 (C3 state unavailable)
resource allocation from an x86 Host-PCI bridge driver so that it can be
reused by the ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver (and eventually the MPTable
Host-PCI bridge driver) instead of duplicating the same logic. Note that
this means that hw.acpi.host_mem_start is now replaced with the
hw.pci.host_mem_start tunable that was already used in the non-ACPI case.
This also removes hw.acpi.host_mem_start on ia64 where it was not
applicable (the implementation was very x86-specific).
While here, adjust the logic to apply the new start address on any
"wildcard" allocation even if that allocation comes from a subset of
the allowable address range.
Reviewed by: imp (1)
register both status change and link state change callbacks.
Implement checking valid link in state change callback and poll
active link state in vr_tick(). This allows immediate detection of
lost link as well as protecting driver from frequent link flips during
link renegotiation. taskq implementation was removed because driver
now needs to poll link state in vr_tick().
While I'm here do not report current link state if interface is not
running.
Tested by: n_hibma
MFC after: 1 week
o Consider No CIS a normal event and stop whining about it so much
(too many cards are like this, espeically usb/firewire cards).
o Add comments to the cis reading code.
o Made the read from config space a smidge easier to read and eliminate
a loop that can be done mathematically.
present. Only call the bus to check if we actually do timeout so we
don't affect the normal case (since this case needn't be optimized and
this guards against all races).
child is still present. If not, return 'handled' and don't print
anything (this is expected behavior). We expect an interrupt on eject,
power-down and/or shutdown.
particular flow control and dma coalesce. Also improve the
sysctl operation on those too.
Add IPv6 detection in the ioctl code, this was done for
ixgbe first, carrying that over.
Add resource ability to disable particular adapter.
Add HW TSO capability so vlans can make use of TSO
proceeding.
On boot, some laptops with certain cards in them sometimes fail on
boot, but if the card is inserted after boot it works. Experiments
show that small delays here makes things more reliable. It is
believed that some combinations need a little more time before the
power on the card is really stable enough to be reliable once the
power is stable in the bridge.
ACPI Device() objects that do not have any device IDs available via the
_HID or _CID methods. Without a device ID a device driver cannot attach
to the device anyway. Namespace objects that are devices but not of
type ACPI_TYPE_DEVICE are not affected.
A few BIOSes have also attached a _CRS method to a PCI device to
allocate resources that are not managed via a BAR. With the previous
code those resources are allocated from acpi0 directly which can interfere
with the new PCI-PCI bridge driver (since the PCI device in question may
be behind a bridge and its resources should be allocated from that
bridge's windows instead). The resources were also orphaned and
and would end up associated with some other random device whose device_t
reused the pointer of the original ACPI-enumerated device (after it was
free'd by the ACPI PCI bus driver) in devinfo output which was confusing.
If we want to handle _CRS on PCI devices we can adjust the ACPI PCI bus
driver to do that in the future and associate the resources with the
proper device object respecting PCI-PCI bridges, etc.
Note that with this change the ACPI PCI bus driver no longer has to
delete ACPI-enumerated device_t devices that mirror PCI devices since
they should in general not exist. There are rare cases when a BIOS
will give a PCI device a _HID (e.g. I've seen a PCI-ISA bridge given
a _HID for a system resource device). In that case we leave both the
ACPI and PCI-enumerated device_t objects around just as in the previous
code.
method instead of reusing the existing per-queue interrupt task.
Reusing the per-queue interrupt task could result in both an interrupt
thread and the taskqueue thread trying to handle received packets on a
single queue resulting in out-of-order packet processing.
- Don't define igb_start() at all on 8.0 and where if_transmit is used.
Replace last remaining call to igb_start() with a loop to kick off
transmit on each queue instead.
- Call ether_ifdetach() earlier in igb_detach().
- Drain tasks and free taskqueues during igb_detach().
Reviewed by: jfv
MFC after: 1 week
announced during boot and contains the port number. The pnpinfo string
lists the port type (PUC_TYPE_* constants).
Tested by: Boris Samorodov bsam ipt ru
MFC after: 1 week
sys/dev/xen/blkback/blkback.c:
o Implement front-end request coalescing. This greatly improves the
performance of front-end clients that are unaware of the dynamic
request-size/number of requests negotiation available in the
FreeBSD backend driver. This required a large restructuring
in how this driver records in-flight transactions and how those
transactions are mapped into kernel KVA. For example, the driver
now includes a mini "KVA manager" that allocates ranges of
contiguous KVA to patches of requests that are physically
contiguous in the backing store so that a single bio or UIO
segment can be used to represent the I/O.
o Refuse to open any backend files or devices if the system
has yet to mount root. This avoids a panic.
o Properly handle "onlined" devices. An "onlined" backend
device stays attached to its backing store across front-end
disconnections. This feature is intended to reduce latency
when a front-end does a hand-off to another driver (e.g.
PV aware bootloader to OS kernel) or during a VM reboot.
o Harden the driver against a pathological/buggy front-end
by carefully vetting front-end XenStore data such as the
front-end state.
o Add sysctls that report the negotiated number of
segments per-request and the number of requests that
can be concurrently in flight.
Submitted by: kdm
Reviewed by: gibbs
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
of the devices we manage. These changes can be due to writes
we make ourselves or due to changes made by the control domain.
The goal of these changes is to insure that all state transitions
can be detected regardless of their source and to allow common
device policies (e.g. "onlined" backend devices) to be centralized
in the XenBus bus code.
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusvar.h:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbus.c:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbus_if.m:
Add a new method for XenBus drivers "localend_changed".
This method is invoked whenever a write is detected to
a device's XenBus tree. The default implementation of
this method is a no-op.
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbus_if.m:
sys/dev/xen/netfront/netfront.c:
sys/dev/xen/blkfront/blkfront.c:
sys/dev/xen/blkback/blkback.c:
Change the signature of the "otherend_changed" method.
This notification cannot fail, so it should return void.
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb_back.c:
Add "online" device handling to the XenBus Back Bus
support code. An online backend device remains active
after a front-end detaches as a reconnect is expected
to occur in the near future.
sys/xen/interface/io/xenbus.h:
Add comment block further explaining the meaning and
driver responsibilities associated with the XenBus
Closed state.
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb.c:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb.h:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb_back.c:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb_front.c:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb_if.m:
o Register a XenStore watch against the local XenBus tree
for all devices.
o Cache the string length of the path to our local tree.
o Allow the xenbus front and back drivers to hook/filter both
local and otherend watch processing.
o Update the device ivar version of "state" when we detect
a XenStore update of that node.
sys/dev/xen/control/control.c:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbus.c:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb.c:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb.h:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusvar.h:
sys/xen/xenstore/xenstorevar.h:
Allow clients of the XenStore watch mechanism to attach
a single uintptr_t worth of client data to the watch.
This removes the need to carefully place client watch
data within enclosing objects so that a cast or offsetof
calculation can be used to convert from watch to enclosing
object.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
- Fix races on setting AAC_AIFFLAGS_ALLOCFIBS
- Remove some unused AAC_IFFLAGS_* bits.
Please note that the kthread still makes a difference between the
total mask and AAC_AIFFLAGS_ALLOCFIBS because more flags may be
added in the future to aifflags.
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Reported and reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 2 weeks
but has only 2 SATA ports instead of 4. The worst part is that SStatus and
SError registers for missing ports are not implemented and return wrong
values (0xffffffff), that caused infinite reset loop.
Just ignore that SError value while I found no better way to identify them.
increase robustness (no more calls to panic(9)) and simplify
code.
- Allocate RX/TX data structures as a single buffer rather than
an array of 4KB pages to simplify code.
- Fixed LRO (aka TPA) code. Removed kernel module parameter and
support enabling disabling LRO through ifconfig(8) command line.
LRO is still disabled by default but should be enabled for best
performance on an endpoint device.
- Fixed statistcs code and removed kernel module parameter (stats
should just work).
- Added many software counters to help identify the cause of some
performance issues.
- Streamlined adapter internal init/stop code paths.
- Fiddled with debug code (adding some here, removing some there).
- Continued style(9) adjustments.
- Add retry loops in the i2c read/write functions.
- Combied the ADC channel selection and readout of the value into
one iicbus_transfer to avoid possible races.
Reviewed by: nwhitehorn
of just setting it to the first registered device, reevaluate it for each
device registered, trying to choose best candidate, unless one was forced.
For now use such preference order: play&rec, play, rec.
As side effect, this should workaround the situation when HDMI audio output
of the video card, usually not connected to anything, becomes default, that
requires manual user intervention to make sound working. If at some point
this won't be enough, we can try to fetch some additional priority flags
from the device driver.
For the AR5211/AR5212, this is apparently a one byte pulse duration
counter value. It is only coded up here for the AR5212 as I don't have
any AR5211-series hardware to test it on.
This information was extracted from the Madwifi DFS branch along with
some local additions.
Please note - all this does is extract out the radar event duration,
it in no way reflects the presence of a radar. Further code is needed
to take a set of radar events and filter them to extract out correct
radar pulse trains (and ignore other events.)
For further information, please see:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/dev/ath_hal%284%29/RadarDetection
This includes references to the relevant patents which describe what
is going on.
Obtained from: Madwifi
Many thanks to Tino <tinotom@gmail.com> for drawing my attention to
this, for doing a lot of testing and providing great feedback.
Many thanks to AMD for continuing to release public specifications for
their chipsets.
PR: kern/157568
Tested by: Tino <tinotom@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
points are fixed addresses and (U)EFI CSM specification also mandated that.
Unfortunately, (U)EFI CSM specification does not specifically mention this
is to call service routine via interrupt vector table or to jump directly
to the entry point. As a result, some CSM seems to install two routines
and acts differently, depending on how it was executed, unfortunately.
When INT 15h is used, it calls a function pointer (which is probably a UEFI
service function). When it jumps directly to the entry point, it executes
a simple and traditional INT 15h service routine. Therefore, actually there
are two possible fixes, i. e., this fix or jumping directly to the fixed
entry point. However, we chose this fix because a) keyboard typematic
support via BIOS is becoming extremely rarer and b) we cannot support random
service routine installed by a firmware or a boot loader. This should fix
Lenovo X220 laptop, specifically.
Reviewed by: delphij
MFC after: 3 days
High-speed USB HUB by resetting the transaction translator (TT)
before trying re-enumeration. Also when clear-stall fails multiple times
try a re-enumeration.
Suggested by: Trevor Blackwell
MFC after: 14 days
the recent changes to track BAR state explicitly. The code would now
attempt to add the same BAR twice in this case. Instead, change this so
that it recognizes this case and only adds it once and do not delete the
BAR outright after parsing the CIS.
Tested by: bschmidt
probe requests at 1Mbps while being associated on a 5GHz channel. Sending
those at 6Mbps does work, so use that instead during a background scan.
This workaround allows us to re-enable background scan support for the
4965 adapters.
Also, just enabling one antenna on 5GHz results in better reception of
beacons:
test 00:26:5a:c6:14:1a 40 54M -71:-95 200 E WME HTCAP ATH
vs
test 00:26:5a:c6:14:1a 40 54M -92:-95 200 E WME HTCAP ATH
Due to roam:rssi thresholds set to 7 by default it might have been
impossible to associate to that network. While here use
IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_5GHZ() to determine the band.
- Add a retry loop for the i2c sensor reading.
- Check on busy status of the chip and on invalid values.
- Fix a typo in a comment.
- Replace the constant 2732 with the ZERO_C_TO_K macro.
Approved by: nwhitehorn (mentor)
module.
* If sc->sc_dodfs is set to 1 by the ath_dfs_radar_enable(),
set the relevant rx filter bit to begin receiving radar PHY
errors. The HAL code already knows how to set the relevant
error mask register to enable radar events.
* Add a missing call to ath_dfs_radar_enable() after ath_hal_reset()
* change ath_dfs_process_phyerr() to take a const char *buf for now,
rather than a descriptor. This way it can get access to the packet
buffer contents.
real owner of the device ID. Also rename the associated config
function while here.
- Add support for the 2-port and 4-port Exar parts as well: Exar XR17C/D152
and Exar XR17C154.
Tested by: Mike Tancsa, Willy Offermans Willy of offermans rompen nl
MFC after: 1 week
- Add a retry loop for the i2c sensor reading.
- Update the sensor handling for sensors which do not have a location
entry. [1]
Submitted by: [1] Justin Hibbits.
Approved by: nwhitehorn (mentor)
These cause problems when trying to include the header in a C++ project.
Rename them to 'evt_class', and track the change in mfi and mfiutil.
Submitted by: Mark Johnston
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by: jhb@
MFC after: 1 week
crusty, and this still isn't perfect, but its at least a bit
more recent.
Secondly, a few improvements to the driver from Andrew Boyer,
support hint to allow devices to not attach, add VLAN_HWTSO
capability so vlans can use TSO, fix in the interrupt handler
to make sure the stack TX queue is processed. Oh, and also
make sure IPv6 does not cause a re-init in the ioctl routine.
Thanks for your efforts Andrew!
Thanks to Claudio Jeker for noticing the ixgbe_xmit() routine
was not correctly swapping the dma map from the first to the
last descriptor in a multi-descriptor transmission, corrected
this.
This is in no way a complete DFS/radar detection implementation!
It merely creates an abstracted interface which allows for future
development of the DFS radar detection code.
Note: Net80211 already handles the bulk of the DFS machinery,
all we need to do here is figure out that a radar event has occured
and inform it as such. It then drives the DFS state engine for us.
The "null" DFS radar detection module is included by default;
it doesn't require a device line.
This commit:
* Adds a simple abstracted layer for radar detection state -
sys/dev/ath/ath_dfs/;
* Implements a null DFS module which doesn't do anything;
(ie, implements the exact behaviour at the moment);
* Adds hooks to the ath driver to process received radar events
and gives the DFS module a chance to determine whether
a radar has been detected.
Obtained from: Atheros
Please note - this doesn't in any way constitute a full DFS
implementation, it merely adds the relevant capability bits and
radar detection threshold register access.
The particulars:
* Add new capability bits outlining what the DFS capabilities
are of the various chipsets.
* Add HAL methods to set and get the radar related register values.
* Add AR5212 and AR5416+ DFS radar related register value
routines.
* Add a missing HAL phy error code that's related to radar event
processing.
* Add HAL_PHYERR_PARAM, a data type that encapsulates the radar
register values.
The AR5212 routines are just for completeness. The AR5416 routines
are a super-set of those; I may later on do a drive-by pass to
tidy up duplicate code.
Obtained from: Linux, Atheros
The version is used to check if a module is already preset, not setting
it results in:
can't re-use a leaf (ipw)!
module_register: module pci/ipw already exists!
Module pci/ipw failed to register: 17
while trying to load the module due to an entry in loader.conf. With this
commit we get the expected:
module ipw already present!
Reported by: Dru Lavigne, bz
Tested by: bz
MFC after: 1 week
process received frames. Previously it was possible to handle RX
interrupts even if controller is not fully initialized. This
resulted in non-working driver after system is up and running.
Reported by: hselasky
Tested by: hselasky
queues. Try to have a set of these per port when possible, fall back
to sharing a common pool between all ports otherwise.
- One control queue per port (used to be one per hardware channel).
- t4_eth_rx now handles Ethernet rx only.
- sysctls to display pidx/cidx for some queues.
MFC after: 1 week
filters working. (All other filters - switch without L2 info rewrite,
steer, and drop - were already fully-functional).
Some contrived examples of "switch" filters with L2 rewriting:
# cxgbetool t4nex0 iport 0 dport 80 action switch vlan +9 eport 3
Intercept all packets received on physical port 0 with TCP port 80 as
destination, insert a vlan tag with VID 9, and send them out of port 3.
# cxgbetool t4nex0 sip 192.168.1.1/32 ivlan 5 action switch \
vlan =9 smac aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff eport 0
Intercept all packets (received on any port) with source IP address
192.168.1.1 and VLAN id 5, rewrite the VLAN id to 9, rewrite source mac
to aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff, and send it out of port 0.
MFC after: 1 week
hardware supports it.
Since ni->ni_htcap in hostap mode is what the remote end has advertised,
not what has been negotiated/decided, we need to check ourselves what
the current channel width is and what the hardware supports before
enabling short-GI.
It's important that short-GI isn't enabled when it isn't negotiated
and when the hardware doesn't support it (ie, short-gi for 20mhz channels
on any chip < AR9287.)
I've quickly verified this on the AR9285 in 11n mode.
1. Both mmc_read_ivar() and sdhci_read_ivar() use the expression
'*(int *)result = val' to assign to result which is uintptr_t *.
This does not work on big-endian 64 bit systems.
2. The media_size ivar is declared as 'off_t' which does not fit
into uintptr_t in 32bit systems, change this to long.
Submitted by: kanthms at netlogicmicro com (initial version)
This has been disabled until now because there hasn't been any supported
device which has this feature. Since the AR9287 is the first device to
support it, and since now the HAL has functional AR9287+11n support,
flip this on.
which uses a non-standard clock (* 8) while any additional ports use
SUN1699 chips which use a standard clock.
Tested by: N.J. Mann njm of njm me uk
MFC after: 1 week
MCR register on the Sunix Sun1699 chip tends to be set but doesn't
seem to have a function. That is, FreeBSD just works (provided the
correct RCLK is used) regardless.
PR: kern/129663
Diagnostics: Eygene Ryabinkin <rea-fbsd at codelabs.ru>
MFC after: 3 days
AR9287 EEPROM layout.
The AR9287 only supports 2ghz, so I've removed the 5ghz code (but left
the 5ghz edge flags in there for now) and hard-coded the 2ghz-only
path.
Whilst I'm there, fix a typo (ar9285->ar9287.)
This meets basic TX throughput testing - iperf TX tests == 27-28mbit in 11g,
matching the rest of my 11g kit.
I'm assuming for now that the AR9287 is only open-loop TX power control
(as mine is) so I've hard-coded the attach path to fail if the NIC is
not open-loop.
This greatly simplifies the TX calibration path and the amount of code
which needs to be ported over.
This still isn't complete - the rate calculation code still needs to be
ported and it all needs to be glued together.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k
without waiting for device readiness (or at least not updating FIS receive
area in time). To workaround that, special quirk was added earlier to wait
for the FIS receive area update. But it was found that under same PCI ID
0x91231b4b and revision 0x11 there are two completely different chip
versions (firmware?): HBA and RAID. The problem is that RAID version in
some cases, such as hot-plug, does not update FIS receive area at all!
To workaround that, differentiate the chip versions by their capabilities,
and, if RAID version found, skip FIS receive area update waiting and read
device signature from the PxSIG register instead. This method doesn't work
for HBA version when PMP attached, so keep using previous workaround there.
It isn't linked into the build because it's missing the TX power
and PDADC programming code.
This code is mostly based on the ath9k codebase, compared against
the Atheros codebase as appropriate.
What's implemented:
* probe/attach
* EEPROM board value programming
* RX initial calibration
* radio channel programming
* general MAC / baseband setup
* async fifo setup
* open-loop tx power calibration
What's missing before it can be enabled by default:
* TX power / calibration setting code
* closed-loop tx power calibration routines
* TSF2 handling
* generic timer support from ath9k
Obtained from: Atheros, ath9k
(SEMB) is unable to communicate to Storage Enclosure Processor (SEP), in
response to hard and soft resets it should among other things return value
0x7F in Status register. The weird side is that it means DRQ bit set, which
tells that reset request is not completed. It would be fine if SEMB was the
only device on port. But if SEMB connected to PMP or built into it, it may
block access to other devices sharing same SATA port.
Make some tunings/fixes to soft-reset handling to workaround the issue:
- ahci(4): request CLO on the port after soft reset to ignore DRQ bit;
- siis(4): gracefully reinitialize port after soft reset timeout (hardware
doesn't detect reset request completion in this case);
- mvs(4): if PMP is used, send dummy soft-reset to the PMP port to make it
clear DRQ bit for us.
For now this makes quirks in ata_pmp.c, hiding SEMB ports of SiI3726/SiI4726
PMPs, less important. Further, if hardware permit, I hope to implement real
SEMB support.
values for the commands, compared to the internal command values
(HAL_ANI_CMD.)
My eventual aim is to make the HAL_ANI_CMD internal enum match
the public API and then remove all this messiness.
This now allows HAL_CAP_INTMIT users to use a public HAL_CAP_INTMIT_
enum rather than magic constants.
The only magic constants currently used by if_ath are "enable" and
"present". Some local tools of mine allow for direct, manual fiddling
of the ANI variables and I'll convert these to use the public enum API
before I commit them.
of the ANI statistics and committing some tools which use these.
* Change HAL_ANI_* commands _back_ to be numerical, rather than a
bitmap;
* modify access to the ANI control bitmap to convert a command to
a bitmap;
* Fix the ANI noise immunity fiddling for CCK errors - it wasn't
checking whether noise immunity was disabled or not.
which did AR5212 specific initialisation. This would cause some slight
silliness when enabling/disabling ANI.
Just to be completely correct - and to ensure the phy error mask/RX filter
register isn't incorrectly played with - make the ANI control function a
method, have it set appropriately for AR5212/AR5416, and call that from the
ANI control interface.
This should hopefully make it clearer to developers what is going on
and when TPC is being hacked on, make it obvious why it isn't working for
series 1, 2, 3.
I won't flip on setting TX power for TX series 1, 2, 3 until I've done
some further testing with Kite to ensure it doesn't break anything.
(Before people ask - yes, TPC is only needed for 5ghz regdomains and
yes, Kite is a 2.4ghz only chip, but there are potential use cases
for 2ghz TPC. I just need to sit down and ensure it's supported and
functional.)
control the antenna control bits for the four TX series and the
TPC settings for TX series 1, 2, 3.
The specifics:
* The TPC setting for TX series 0 is handled in ctl0.
* TPC is currently disabled, so the per-packet TX power is
set via the global per-rate TX power register, not per packet.
* The antenna control bits don't matter for AR5416 and later
so they should stay 0 (which they currently do); they may
be set for Kite but as there's no TX diversity supported
at the moment (it requires the NIC to be built with an
external antenna switch, matching how antenna diversity
is done on legacy NICs), so again keep them 0.
This is in preparation for supporting per-rate TPC on the
AR5416 and later. The Kite (and soon to come Kiwi) code
sets ctl8-11 to 0x0, which doesn't have any effect at
the moment. When TPC is enabled it would result in the
second, third and fourth TX series attmpts to be done with
a TX power of 0. This commit doesn't change that; it'll
be followed up with some commits to properly set the TPC
registers appropriately.
quality to 950. HPET on modern platforms usually have better resolution and
lower latency than ACPI timer. Effectively this changes default timecounter
hardware from ACPI-fast to HPET by default when both are available.
Discussed with: avg
bits of the register is used for other purposes such that clearing
these bits resulted in unexpected results such as corrupted RX
frames or missing LE status updates. For old controllers like
Yukon EC it had no effect but it caused all kind of troubles on
Yukon Supreme.
This change shall improve stability of controllers like Yukon
Ultra, Ultra2, Extreme, Optima and Supreme.
Rewrite atomic operations for powerpc in order to achieve the following:
- Produce a type-clean implementation (in terms of functions arguments
and returned values) for the primitives.
- Fix errors with _long() atomics where they ended up with the wrong
arguments to be accepted.
- Follow the sys/type.h specifics that define the numbered types starting
from standard C types.
- Let _ptr() version to not auto-magically cast arguments, but leave
the burden on callers, as _ptr() atomic is intended to be used
relatively rarely.
Fix cfi in order to support the latest point.
In collabouration with: bde
Tested by: andreast, nwhitehorn, jceel
MFC after: 2 weeks
which is now disabled by default. The detection is known to cause hangs
on boot with some new Lenovo laptops on FreeBSD/amd64.
Reported by: gnn
Discussed with: jkim
MFC after: 3 months
not true on old PCI based controllers. DAC configuration is read
from EEPROM in device reset phase and driver can override DAC
configuration. However I guess there is an undocumented reason why
EEPROM configuration does not enable DAC so do not blindly override
DAC configuration. Recent PCIe based controllers are supposed to
support 64bit DMA so allow 64bit DMA only on PCIe based controllers.
PR: kern/157184
MFC after: 1 week
IFF_DRV_RUNNING flag. Previously running dhclient or adding alias
addresses reinitialized controller and it resulted in unnecessary
link flips.
Reviewed by: marius
Oxford Semiconductor OX16PCI954 but uses only two ports with a non-default
clock rate.
PR: kern/152034
Tested by: Hans Fiedler hans of hermes louisville edu
MFC after: 1 week
This brings USB bus more in line with how newbus is supposed to be used.
Also, because of the two-pass probing the following message was produced
by devd in default configuration when almost any USB device was
connected:
Unknown USB device: vendor <> product <> bus <>
This should be fixed now.
Note that many USB device drivers pass some information from probe
method to attach method via ivars. For this to continue working we rely
on the fact that the subr_bus code calls probe method of a winning driver
again before calling its attach method in the case where multiple
drivers claim to support a device. This is done because device
description is set in successful probe methods and we want to get a correct
device description from a winning driver. So now this logic is re-used
for setting ivars too.
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 1 month
When supported by hardware, this allows to control per-port activity, locate
and fault LEDs via the led(4) API for localization and status reporting
purposes. Supporting AHCI controllers may transmit that information to the
backplane controllers via SGPIO interface. Backplane controllers interpret
received statuses in some way (IBPI standard) to report them using present
indicators.
the multicast key search support for AR5212, AR5416 and later.
The general HAL routine ath_hal_getcapability() implement checking this
but it's overridden by a check in ar5212_misc:ar5212GetCapability().
This restores the later functionality in case it's found to be broken
in any of the 11n chipsets.
The other queues, especially the command queue, uses the FIFO mode
which doesn't require the byte count table because queued entries are
processed in order.
Pointed out by: Lucius Windschuh <lwindschuh at googlemail dot com>
Since the returned NF will be -ve, checking for <= 0 is not good
enough. For now, check whether it equals 0 or -1; a future commit
will tidy this mess up and have it return HAL_BOOL instead.
The eeprom Get method should return HAL_OK if fastclock is enabled in the
EEPROM. It was returning the opposite of what it should have.
Submitted by: Matthew Fleming <mdf356@gmail.com>
The code assumed it could return HAL_OK, HAL_EINVAL and other
HAL_STATUS types; so it shouldn't be declared as returning HAL_BOOL.
This commit was brought to you by the Clang compiler.
Submitted by: Matthew Fleming <mdf356@gmail.com>
I've tested this locally and it does indeed read and attach to an AR9287
EEPROM. But a lot more code needs to be ported over to the HAL before
the AR9287 is functional.
I'm importing this separate from the rest of the codebase (and unlinked from
the build for now) in case someone wishes to begin fiddling with porting
the rest of the code over from Linux ath9k.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k
is totally disabled.
The Atheros HAL code does this for Sowl/Howl but not for Owl (AR5416) where
RIFS is disabled by default.
This seems to quieten the occasional baseband hang I've been seeing with
the AR9160 in STA mode under constant heavy traffic load.
Obtained from: Atheros
Some files keep the SUN4V tags as a code reference, for the future,
if any rewamped sun4v support wants to be added again.
Reviewed by: marius
Tested by: sbruno
Approved by: re
architectures (i386, for example) the virtual memory space may be
constrained enough that 2MB is a large chunk. Use 64K for arches
other than amd64 and ia64, with special handling for sparc64 due to
differing hardware.
Also commit the comment changes to kmem_init_zero_region() that I
missed due to not saving the file. (Darn the unfamiliar development
environment).
Arch maintainers, please feel free to adjust ZERO_REGION_SIZE as you
see fit.
Requested by: alc
MFC after: 1 week
MFC with: r221853
that for _ptr operations, when not used directly with uintptr_t, we
needed to manually cast.
Use the cast on the _ptr version, where it actually wasn't (please note
that i386 doesn't get it right, while amd64 doesn't seem to compile
cfi neither in LINT, that is why it doesn't fail).
Reported by: sbruno
for the AR9280 based NICs if it's actually enabled.
Some of the OLC code was erroneously called during setup
and calibration. This may have caused some incorrect behaviour.
table which contains the per-rate target TX power.
This code is shared between the v14 eeprom board setup (AR5416, AR9160,
AR9280) and will also be used by the upcoming Kite (AR9287) support.
* grab the main, alt and selected LNA config
* add some optional / disabled logging code
* add a check to reject packets with an invalid main rssi too,
in case the alt is the active receive chain and main is -ve.
Note: The software-controlled combined diversity code is still disabled.
- Use bus_bind_intr() to bind interrupt to a CPU when RSS/TSS is used.
- Use M_DONTWAIT for RSS/TSS buffer allocation.
- Add statistic to track max DRBR queue depth.
- Fix problem in bxe_change_mtu() which referenced the old MTU size
in a debug print statement.
MFC after: Two weeks
disabled for BCM5719 A0 revision due to known hardware errata.
Many thanks to Broadcom for continuing support of FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Geans Pin at Broadcom
AR8132 FastEthernet controller. The PHY has no ability to
establish a gigabit link. Previously only link parters which
support down-shifting was able to establish link.
This change should fix a long standing link establishment issue of
AR8132.
PR: kern/156935
MFC after: 1 week
Casting a pointer to a wide integer is probably not that bad, but I am
still guilty of not testing this.
Pointyhat to: avg
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r221803
This brings our implementation in line with OSS specification for
systems that support mmap. The change should also improve compatibility
with OSS software not specifically written for FreeBSD, e.g. PulseAudio
OSS plugin.
Reviewed by: kib, jhb
MFC after: 1 week
environments.
In setups where NF calibration can take a while, don't load the CCA
and kick off a new NF calibration if the previous one hasn't yet
completed. This shouldn't happen unless the environment is noisy but
those exist (hi phk!).
Here, if the previous NF hasn't completed when ar5416LoadNf() is run
(which reads the NF), it skips updating the history buffer, loading
the NF CCA array and kicking off the next NF cal. It's hoped it'll
occur in the next long calibration interval.
Obtained from: Atheros, ath9k, my local HAL
This is taking quite a while for some people in some situations
(eg AR5418 in phk's Abusive Radio Environment).
Instead, the rest of the calibration related code should
ensure that a NF calibration has occured before reading NF
values and kicking off another NF calibration.
The channel should also likely be marked as "noisy" (CWINT)
if the NF calibration takes too long.
* Correct some of the silicon revision checks to match what
the Atheros HAL does. (See [1] below.)
* Move the PA cal and init cal method assignment to -after-
the mac version/revision IDs are stored. The AR9285 init
cal was never being called.
* Enable ANI.
Note Kite 1.0 and 1.1 were prototypes that shouldn't be seen
in the wild. Linux ath9k simply removed the prototype code from
their codebase. I'm going to leave it in there for now but
make it conditionally compilable in the future.
Obtained from: Atheros
newer controllers. However, all data sheet I have access has no
indication that buffer manager should not be touched on these
controllers. It seems the buffer manager always runs on BCM5705 or
newer controllers. Some controller(e.g. BCM5719) needs other buffer
manager configuration so driver should enable buffer manager for
all controllers. Both Linux and OpenBSD/NetBSD use the same
approach.
This change polls enable bit of block to know whether specified
block was really stopped as well as enabling buffer manager for all
controllers in driver initialization.
Obtained from: NetBSD
from Atheros as to what/when this is supposed to be enabled.
Using the default RX fast diversity settings seems to help quite
a bit.
Whilst I'm here, change the prototype to return HAL_BOOL rather than int.
For now, the diversity settings are controlled by 'txantenna',
-not- rxantenna. This is because the earlier chipsets had
controllable TX diversity; the RX antenna setting twiddles
the default antenna register. I'll try sort that stuff out at
some point.
Call the antenna switch function from the board setup function
so scans, channel changes, mode changes, etc don't set the
diversity back to a default state too far from what's intended.
Things to todo:
* Squirrel away the last antenna diversity/combining parameters
and restore them during board setup if HAL_ANT_VARIABLE is
defined. That way scans, etc don't reset the diversity settings.
* Add some more public facing statistics, rather than what's
simply logged under HAL_DEBUG_DIVERSITY.
For now, the fixed antenna settings behave better than variable
settings for me. I have some further fiddling to do..
Obtained from: Atheros
The macro which I incorrectly copied into ah_internal.h assumed
that it'd be called with an AR_SREV_MERLIN_20() check to ensure
it was only enabled for Merlin (AR9280) silicon revision 2.0 or
later.
Trouble is, the 5GHz fast clock EEPROM flag is only valid for
EEPROM revision 16 or greater; it's assumed to be enabled
by default for Merlin rev >= 2.0. This meant it'd be incorrectly
set for AR5416 and AR9160 in 5GHz mode.
This would have affected non-default clock timings such as SIFS,
ACK and slot time. The incorrect slot time was very likely wrong
for 5ghz mode.
* Modify AR_SREV_MERLIN_20() to match the Atheros/Linux ath9k behaviour -
its supposed to match Merlin 2.0 and later Merlin chips.
AR_SREV_MERLIN_20_OR_LATER() matches AR9280 2.0 and later chips
(AR9285, AR9287, etc.)
- instead of calling iwn_plcp_signal() for every frame, map the expected
value directly within wn->ridx
- concat plcp, rflags and xrflags, there is no clean byte boundary within
the flags, for example the antenna setting uses bit 6, 7 and 8
- there is still need for a custom rate to plcp mapping, as those expected
by the hardware are not conform to the std
On legacy channels every once in a while the firmware throws a SYSASSERT
on line 208. On HT channels though this does always happen and I'm not
aware of any workaround currently.
for the given channel is available.
It isn't used yet; ar5416GetWirelessModes() needs to be taught
about this rather than assuming HT20/HT40 is available.
This seems to make the AR9160 behave better during heavy scanning,
where before it'd hang and require a hard reset to recover.
Obtained From: Linux ath9k, Atheros
modifying AR_DIAG_SW.
There's a hardware workaround which sets disabling some errors
early at startup and clears said bits before the PCU begins
receiving - it does this to avoid RX descriptor status errors.
It's possible these bits aren't being completely properly twiddled
in all instances; but in particular if the diag_reg HAL variable
is set it won't be setting these bits correctly. I'll review this
at some point.
* Disable multicast search on mac address and key id - the driver
doesn't use it at the moment and thus adhoc may be broken for
merlin and later.
* Change this to be for Merlin 1.0 (which from what I understand
wasn't ever publicly released) to be more correct.
Apparently all three RX chains need to be enabled before initial calibration
is done, even if only two are configured.
Reorder the alt chain swap bit to match what the Atheros HAL is doing.
Obtained From: ath9k, Atheros
* Shuffle some of the capability numbers around to match the
Atheros HAL capability IDs, just for consistency.
* Add some new capabilities to FreeBSD from the Atheros
HAL which will be be shortly used when new chipsets are added
(HAL SGI-20 support is for Kiwi/AR9287 support); for
TX aggregation (MBSSID aggregate support, WDS aggregation
support); CST/GTT support for carrier sense/TX timeout.
channel when the channel is HT/40.
The new ANI code (primarily for the AR9300/AR9400) in ath9k sets this
register but the ANI code for the previous 11n chips didn't set this.
Unlike ath9k, only set this for HT/40 channels.
Obtained From: ath9k
These describe FCC/Japan channel and DFS behaviour.
The AR9285 and later chips don't set these bits in the eeprom, the correct
behaviour is to just assume all five bits are enabled.
specific.
The Atheros HAL and FreeBSD HAL share the same capabilities up
until HAL_CAP_11D, where things begin to diverge.
I'll look at tidying these up soon.
Obtained from: Atheros
* Add Howl (ar9130) to the list of chips that have DFS/BB/MAC hangs
* Don't treat unknown BB hangs as fatal; ath9k/Atheros HAL don't
treat it as such.
* Add HAL_DEBUG_DFS to the debug fields in ath_hal/ah_debug.h
The BB hang check simply loops over an observation register checking
for a stuck state engine, but it can happen under high traffic
conditions. Ath9k and the Atheros HAL simply log a debug message and
continue.
Private to FreeBSD:
* Add HAL_DEBUG_HANG to the debug fields
* Change the hang debugging to HAL_DEBUG_HANG rather than HAL_DEBUG_DFS
like in the Atheros HAL.
Obtained from: Atheros
For now, these are equivalent macros. AR_SREV_OWL{X}_OR_LATER
will later change to exclude Howl (AR9130) in line with what
the Atheros HAL does.
This should not functionally change anything.
Obtained from: Atheros
A quick story, which is partially documented in the commit.
The silicon revision in Linux ath9k and the Atheros HAL use an
AR_SREV_REVISION mask of 0x07.
FreeBSD's HAL uses the AR5212 AR_SREV_REVISION mask of 0x0F.
Thus the OWL silicon revisions were coming through as 0xA, 0xB,
0xC, rather than 0x0, 0x1 and 0x2.
My ath9k-sourced AR_SREV_OWL_<X> macros were thus using the wrong
silicon revision values and wouldn't correctly match.
This commit does a few things:
* Change the AR_SREV_OWL_<x> macros to use the AR_SREV_REVISION_OWL_*
values, not AR_XSREV_REVISION_OWL macros;
* Disable AR_XSREV_REVISION_OWL_* values;
* Modify the IS_5416 to properly check the MAC is OWL, rather than
potentially matching on non-OWL revisions (which shouldn't happen
unless there's a silicon revision of higher than 0x9 in a later
chip..)
* Add a couple more macros from the Atheros HAL for compatibility.
The main difference now is that the Atheros HAL defines
AR_SREV_OWL_{20,22}_OR_LATER subtly differently - it fails on all HOWL
silicon. The AR_SREV_5416_*_OR_LATER macros match on the relevant OWL
version -and- all HOWL versions, along with subsequent versions.
A subsequent commit is going to migrate the uses of AR_SREV_OWL_X_OR_LATER
to AR_SREV_5416_X_OR_LATER to match what's going on in the Atheros HAL.
There's only two uses of AR_SREV_OWL_X_OR_LATER which currently don't
apply to FreeBSD but it may do in the future.
Yes, it's all confusing!
tick driving logic to xl_tick(). Now xl_tick() handles MII tick as
well as periodic updating of statistics.
This change removes a hack used in interrupt handler where it
wanted to update statistics without driving MII tick.
picking the next available one. This may explain why xl(4) sees TX
underrun error with no queued frame. I hope this addresses a long
standing xl(4) watchdog timeout issue as well.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
RX descriptor ring. Previously it returned the number of frames
that were successfully passed to upper stack which in turn means it
ignored frames that were discarded due to errors. The number of
processed frames in RX descriptor ring is used to detect whether
driver is out of sync with controller's current descriptor pointer.
Returning number of processed frames reduces unnecessary (probably
wrong) re-synchronization.
While here, remove unnecessary local variable initialization.
handler for 3C90x and 3C90xB/C respectively. This simplifies ioctl
handler as well as enhancing readability.
While I'm here don't reprogram multicast filter when driver is not
running.
this there is a rare return path that bogusly appears
to fail when it should not. Also white space correction.
Thanks to Arnaud Lacombe for noticing the problem.
cpuset_t objects.
That is going to offer the underlying support for a simple bump of
MAXCPU and then support for number of cpus > 32 (as it is today).
Right now, cpumask_t is an int, 32 bits on all our supported architecture.
cpumask_t on the other side is implemented as an array of longs, and
easilly extendible by definition.
The architectures touched by this commit are the following:
- amd64
- i386
- pc98
- arm
- ia64
- XEN
while the others are still missing.
Userland is believed to be fully converted with the changes contained
here.
Some technical notes:
- This commit may be considered an ABI nop for all the architectures
different from amd64 and ia64 (and sparc64 in the future)
- per-cpu members, which are now converted to cpuset_t, needs to be
accessed avoiding migration, because the size of cpuset_t should be
considered unknown
- size of cpuset_t objects is different from kernel and userland (this is
primirally done in order to leave some more space in userland to cope
with KBI extensions). If you need to access kernel cpuset_t from the
userland please refer to example in this patch on how to do that
correctly (kgdb may be a good source, for example).
- Support for other architectures is going to be added soon
- Only MAXCPU for amd64 is bumped now
The patch has been tested by sbruno and Nicholas Esborn on opteron
4 x 12 pack CPUs. More testing on big SMP is expected to came soon.
pluknet tested the patch with his 8-ways on both amd64 and i386.
Tested by: pluknet, sbruno, gianni, Nicholas Esborn
Reviewed by: jeff, jhb, sbruno
Quoting the ath9k commit message:
At present the noise floor calibration is processed in supported
control and extension chains rather than required chains.
Unnccesarily doing nfcal in all supported chains leads to
invalid nf readings on extn chains and these invalid values
got updated into history buffer. While loading those values
from history buffer is moving the chip to deaf state.
This issue was observed in AR9002/AR9003 chips while doing
associate/dissociate in HT40 mode and interface up/down
in iterative manner. After some iterations, the chip was moved
to deaf state. Somehow the pci devices are recovered by poll work
after chip reset. Raading the nf values in all supported extension chains
when the hw is not yet configured in HT40 mode results invalid values.
Reference: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/753862/
Obtained from: Linux ath9k
The checks should function as follows:
* AR_SREV_<silicon> : check macVersion matches that version id
* AR_SREV_<silicon>_<revision> : check macVersion and macRevision match
the version / revision respectively
* AR_SREV_<silicon>_<revision>_OR_LATER: check that
+ if the chip silicon version == macVersion, enforce revision >= macRevision
+ if the chip silicon version > macVersion, allow it.
For example, AR_SREV_MERLIN() only matches AR9280 (any revision),
AR_SREV_MERLIN_10() would only match AR9280 version 1.0, but
AR_SREV_MERLIN_20_OR_LATER() matches AR9280 version >= 2.0 _AND_
any subsequent MAC (So AR9285, AR9287, etc.)
The specific fixes which may impact users:
* if there is Merlin hardware > revision 2.0, it'll now be correctly
matched by AR_SREV_MERLIN_20_OR_LATER() - the older code simply
would match on either Merlin 2.0 or a subsequent MAC (AR9285, AR9287, etc.)
* Kite version 1.1/1.2 should now correctly match. As these macros
are used in the AR9285 reset/attach path, and it's assumed that the
hardware is kite anyway, the behaviour shouldn't change. It'll only
change if these macros are used in other codepaths shared with
older silicon.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k, Atheros
Reference code that shows how to get a packet's timestamp out of
cxgbe(4). Disabled by default because we don't have a standard way
today to pass this information up the stack.
The timestamp is 60 bits wide and each increment represents 1 tick of
the T4's core clock. As an example, the timestamp granularity is ~4.4ns
for this card:
# sysctl dev.t4nex.0.core_clock
dev.t4nex.0.core_clock: 228125
MFC after: 1 week
- Enable 5-tuple and every-packet lookup.
- Setup the default filter mode to allow filtering/steering based on IP
protocol, ingress port, inner VLAN ID, IP frag, FCoE, and MPS match
type; all combined together. You can also filter based on MAC index,
Ethernet type, IP TOS/IPv6 Traffic Class, and outer VLAN ID but you'll
have to modify the default filter mode and exclude some of the
match-fields in it.
IPv4 and IPv6 SIP/DIP/SPORT/DPORT are always available in all filter
rules.
- Add driver ioctls to get/set the global filter mode.
- Add driver ioctls to program and delete hardware filters. A couple of
the "switch" actions that rewrite Ethernet and VLAN information and
switch the packet out of another port may not work as the L2 code is not
yet in place. Everything else, including all "drop" and "pass" rules
with RSS or absolute qid, should work.
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
have similar hardware features of BCM5718 family except the number
of receive return ring is 4. The BCM57765 family is known to
support IEEE 802.3az EEE(Energy Efficient Ethernet) but this change
does not include EEE support code. I hope EEE is implemented in
near future.
This change will support BCM57761, BCM57765, BCM57781, BCM57785,
BCM57791 and BCM57795. All hardware offloading features are
supported and suspend/resume also should work.
Many thanks to Broadcom for continuing support of FreeBSD.
Tested by: Paul Thornton (prt <> prt dot org)
HW donated by: Broadcom
(reporting IFM_LOOP based on BMCR_LOOP is left in place though as
it might provide useful for debugging). For most mii(4) drivers it
was unclear whether the PHYs driven by them actually support
loopback or not. Moreover, typically loopback mode also needs to
be activated on the MAC, which none of the Ethernet drivers using
mii(4) implements. Given that loopback media has no real use (and
obviously hardly had a chance to actually work) besides for driver
development (which just loopback mode should be sufficient for
though, i.e one doesn't necessary need support for loopback media)
support for it is just dropped as both NetBSD and OpenBSD already
did quite some time ago.
- Let mii_phy_add_media() also announce the support of IFM_NONE.
- Restructure the PHY entry points to use a structure of entry points
instead of discrete function pointers, and extend this to include
a "reset" entry point. Make sure any PHY-specific reset routine is
always used, and provide one for lxtphy(4) which disables MII
interrupts (as is done for a few other PHYs we have drivers for).
This includes changing NIC drivers which previously just called the
generic mii_phy_reset() to now actually call the PHY-specific reset
routine, which might be crucial in some cases. While at it, the
redundant checks in these NIC drivers for mii->mii_instance not being
zero before calling the reset routines were removed because as soon
as one PHY driver attaches mii->mii_instance is incremented and we
hardly can end up in their media change callbacks etc if no PHY driver
has attached as mii_attach() would have failed in that case and not
attach a miibus(4) instance.
Consequently, NIC drivers now no longer should call mii_phy_reset()
directly, so it was removed from EXPORT_SYMS.
- Add a mii_phy_dev_attach() as a companion helper to mii_phy_dev_probe().
The purpose of that function is to perform the common steps to attach
a PHY driver instance and to hook it up to the miibus(4) instance and to
optionally also handle the probing, addition and initialization of the
supported media. So all a PHY driver without any special requirements
has to do in its bus attach method is to call mii_phy_dev_attach()
along with PHY-specific MIIF_* flags, a pointer to its PHY functions
and the add_media set to one. All PHY drivers were updated to take
advantage of mii_phy_dev_attach() as appropriate. Along with these
changes the capability mask was added to the mii_softc structure so
PHY drivers taking advantage of mii_phy_dev_attach() but still
handling media on their own do not need to fiddle with the MII attach
arguments anyway.
- Keep track of the PHY offset in the mii_softc structure. This is done
for compatibility with NetBSD/OpenBSD.
- Keep track of the PHY's OUI, model and revision in the mii_softc
structure. Several PHY drivers require this information also after
attaching and previously had to wrap their own softc around mii_softc.
NetBSD/OpenBSD also keep track of the model and revision on their
mii_softc structure. All PHY drivers were updated to take advantage
as appropriate.
- Convert the mebers of the MII data structure to unsigned where
appropriate. This is partly inspired by NetBSD/OpenBSD.
- According to IEEE 802.3-2002 the bits actually have to be reversed
when mapping an OUI to the MII ID registers. All PHY drivers and
miidevs where changed as necessary. Actually this now again allows to
largely share miidevs with NetBSD, which fixed this problem already
9 years ago. Consequently miidevs was synced as far as possible.
- Add MIIF_NOMANPAUSE and mii_phy_flowstatus() calls to drivers that
weren't explicitly converted to support flow control before. It's
unclear whether flow control actually works with these but typically
it should and their net behavior should be more correct with these
changes in place than without if the MAC driver sets MIIF_DOPAUSE.
Obtained from: NetBSD (partially)
Reviewed by: yongari (earlier version), silence on arch@ and net@
driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any
existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize
the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the
driver actively manages the I/O windows.
This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from
the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The
suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The
suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource()
call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using
bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI
bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the
suballocation request for the child device is retried.
When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and
rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or
end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest
ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window
are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever
direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other
direction if that fails.
Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child
resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If
that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly
however.
The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for
child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range
cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the
firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows
(some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O
window ranges.
The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor
hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge
makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range.
The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option
is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not
yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their
Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the
old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the
kernel option and old driver will be removed.
PR: kern/143874 kern/149306
Tested by: mav
Rationale:
- unlike current behavior this seems to be compliant with OSS
specification:
http://manuals.opensound.com/developer/SNDCTL_DSP_GETIPTR.html
- this seems to meet expectations of some OSS programs compiled for or
ported from Linux, e.g. ALSA OSS plugin
- this doesn't seem to break any programs as far as current testing
shows
Tested by: nox, hselasky
MFC after: 4 days
sectors with all-zeroes.
The zeroes come from a static buffer; null(4) uses a dynamic buffer for
the same purpose (for /dev/zero). It might be a good idea to have a
static, shared, read-only all-zeroes page somewhere in the kernel that
md(4), null(4) and any other code that needs zeroes could use.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 weeks
constraints on the rman and reject attempts to manage a region that is out
of range.
- Fix various places that set rm_end incorrectly (to ~0 or ~0u instead of
~0ul).
- To preserve existing behavior, change rman_init() to set rm_start and
rm_end to allow managing the full range (0 to ~0ul) if they are not set by
the caller when rman_init() is called.
For these devices, the number of supported ports is read from a register
in BAR 0.
PR: kern/134878
Submitted by: David Wood david of wood2 org uk
MFC after: 1 week
The AR9130 is an AR9160/AR5416 family WMAC which is glued directly
to the AR913x SoC peripheral bus (APB) rather than via a PCI/PCIe
bridge.
The specifics:
* A new build option is required to use the AR9130 - AH_SUPPORT_AR9130.
This is needed due to the different location the RTC registers live
with this chip; hopefully this will be undone in the future.
This does currently mean that enabling this option will break non-AR9130
builds, so don't enable it unless you're specifically building an image
for the AR913x SoC.
* Add the new probe, attach, EEPROM and PLL methods specific to Howl.
* Add a work-around to ah_eeprom_v14.c which disables some of the checks
for endian-ness and magic in the EEPROM image if an eepromdata block
is provided. This'll be fixed at a later stage by porting the ath9k
probe code and making sure it doesn't break in other setups (which
my previous attempt at this did.)
* Sprinkle Howl modifications throughput the interrupt path - it doesn't
implement the SYNC interrupt registers, so ignore those.
* Sprinkle Howl chip powerup/down throughout the reset path; the RTC methods
were
* Sprinkle some other Howl workarounds in the reset path.
* Hard-code an alternative setup for the AR_CFG register for Howl, that
sets up things suitable for Big-Endian MIPS (which is the only platform
this chip is glued to.)
This has been tested on the AR913x based TP-Link WR-1043nd mode, in
legacy, HT/20 and HT/40 modes.
Caveats:
* 2ghz has only been tested. I've not seen any 5ghz radios glued to this
chipset so I can't test it.
* AR5416_INTERRUPT_MITIGATION is not supported on the AR9130. At least,
it isn't implemented in ath9k. Please don't enable this.
* This hasn't been tested in MBSS mode or in RX/TX block-aggregation mode.
allocated, not the maximum number of messages the device supports. The
spec only requires the former, and I believe I implemented the latter due
to misunderstanding an e-mail. In particular, this fixes an issue where
having several devices that all support 16 messages can run out of
IDT vectors on x86 even though the driver only uses a single message.
Submitted by: Bret Ketchum bcketchum of gmail
MFC after: 1 week
adding appropriate #ifdefs. For module builds the framework needs
adjustments for at least carp.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
the watchdog, via the watchdog(9) interface.
For that, the WD_LASTVAL bitwise operation is used. It is mutually
exclusive with any explicit timout passing to the watchdogs.
The last timeout can be returned via the wdog_kern_last_timeout()
KPI.
- Add the possibility to pat the watchdogs installed via the watchdog(9)
interface from the kernel.
In order to do that the new KPI wdog_kern_pat() is offered and it does
accept normalized nanoseconds or WD_LASTVAL.
- Avoid to pass WD_ACTIVE down in the watchdog handlers. All the control
bit processing should over to the upper layer functions and not passed
down to the handlers at all.
These changes are intended to be used in order to fix up the watchdog
tripping in situation when the userland is busted, but protection is still
wanted (examples: shutdown syncing / disk dumping).
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by: emaste, des, cognet
MFC after: 2 weeks
will generate a short terminated USB transfer if
the maximum NCM frame size is greater than what
the driver can handle.
Reported by: Matthias Benesch
MFC after: 7 days
Approved by: thompsa (mentor)
- Also a couple minor tweaks to the TX code from the same source.
- Add the INET ioctl code which has been missing from this driver,
and which caused IP aliases to reset the interface.
- Last, some minor logic changes that just reflect upcoming
hardware support, but have no other functional effect now.
MFC after a week
Writing the TX power registers is the same between all of these chips
and later NICs (AR9287, AR9271 USB, etc.) so this will reduce code
duplication when those NICs are added to the HAL.
spurious (and fatal) interrupt errors.
One user reported seeing this:
Apr 22 18:04:24 ceres kernel: ar5416GetPendingInterrupts: fatal error,
ISR_RAC 0x0 SYNC_CAUSE 0x2000
SYNC_CAUSE of 0x2000 is AR_INTR_SYNC_LOCAL_TIMEOUT which is a bus timeout;
this shouldn't cause HAL_INT_FATAL to be set.
After checking out ath9k, ath9k_ar9002_hw_get_isr() clears (*masked)
before continuing, regardless of whether any bits in the ISR registers
are set. So if AR_INTR_SYNC_CAUSE is set to something that isn't
treated as fatal, and AR_ISR isn't read or is read and is 0, then
(*masked) wouldn't be cleared. Thus any of the existing bits set
that were passed in would be preserved in the output.
The caller in if_ath - ath_intr() - wasn't setting the masked value
to 0 before calling ath_hal_getisr(), so anything that was present
in that uninitialised variable would be preserved in the case above
of AR_ISR=0, AR_INTR_SYNC_CAUSE != 0; and if the HAL_INT_FATAL bit
was set, a fatal condition would be interpreted and the chip was
reset.
This patch does the following:
* ath_intr() - set masked to 0 before calling ath_hal_getisr();
* ar5416GetPendingInterrupts() - clear (*masked) before processing
continues; so if the interrupt source is AR_INTR_SYNC_CAUSE
and it isn't fatal, the hardware isn't reset via returning
HAL_INT_FATAL.
This doesn't fix any underlying errors which trigger
AR_INTR_SYNC_LOCAL_TIMEOUT - which is a bus timeout of some
sort - so that likely should be further investigated.
- Centralize PCI resource allocation/release.
- Enable flowid (TSS) support.
- Added "per-fastpath" locks and watchdog timeouts.
- Fixed problem where the CQ producer index was advanced beyond
the size of the CQ ring during initialization.
- Replaced hard-coded debug levels in some debug print statements.
- More style(9) fixes.
MFC after: Two weeks
should respond with all zeroes to any access to slave registers. Test with
PATA devices confirmed such behavior. Unluckily, Intel SATA controllers in
legacy emulation mode behave differently, not making any difference between
ATA and ATAPI devices. It causes false positive slave device detection and,
as result, command timeouts.
To workaround this problem, mask result of legacy-emulated soft-reset with
the device presence information received from the SATA-specific registers.
- TCO_MESSAGEx: TCO specific regs providing the ability to monitor BIOS
bootup activity.
- TCO_NEWCENTURY: reporting RTC year roll over.
- TCO_NMI2SMI_EN, TCO_NMI_NOW: controlling SMIs conversion to NMIs and
NMI trigger.
- SMI_GBL_EN: Enabling SMI delivery for all the northbridge controller.
MFC after: 10 days
This improves hard-reset and hot-plug on these ports.
- Device with ID 0x29218086 is a 2-port variant of ICH9 in legacy mode.
Skip probing for nonexistent slave devices there.
It allows to avoid false positive device detection under Xen, that caused
long probe delays due to subsequent IDENTIFY command timeouts.
MFC after: 1 month
that could have allowed the hardware pidx to reach the cidx even though
the freelist isn't empty. (Haven't actually seen this but it was there
waiting to happen..)
MFC after: 1 week
now a suitable base for all kinds of egress queues.
- Add control queues (sge_ctrlq) and allocate one of these per hardware
channel. They can be used to program filters and steer traffic (and
more).
MFC after: 1 week
- If a ENH_SENS TLV section exit the firmware is capable of doing
enhanced sensitivity calibration.
- Newer devices/firmwares have more calibration commands therefore
hardcoding the noise gain/reset commands no longer works. It is
supposed to use the next index after the newest calibration type
support. Read the command index of the TLV section if available.
This support has not worked for several years, and is not likely to work
again, unless Intel decides to release a native FreeBSD version of their
compiler. ;)
It's also marked inactive by the initvals, and enabled after
the baseband/PLL has been configured, but before the RF
registers have been programmed.
The origin and reason for this particular change is currently unknown.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k
- 6000 series devices need enhanced sensitivity calibration.
- 6000 series devices need a different setting for the shadow reg.
- set the IWN_FLAG_HAS_11N bit if the EEPROM says the device has 11n
support.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Antenna diversity on the >= AR5416 is implemented differently than the
AR5212 and previous chips. So for now, and not to confuse things, just
disable it for now.
- read RSSI only for the active chains
- cast RSSI/NF to int8_t before passing it up to radiotap
- remove the htole64() for the timestamp
Obtained from: OpenBSD
- there is a local variable for sc->fw_dma, use that instead
- OpenBSD uses 5*hz to wait for firmware to be loaded
- in case the firmware module contains invalid data, actually release it
- use ATA_SE_EXCHANGED (SError.DIAG.X) bit to detect hot-plug events when
power-management enabled and ATA_SE_PHY_CHANGED (SError.DIAG.N) can't be
trusted;
- on controllers supporting staggered spin-up (SS) put unused channels
into Listen state instead of Off. It should still save some power, but
allow plug-in events to be detected;
- on controllers supporting cold presence detection (CPD), when power
management enabled, use CPD events to detect hot-plug in addition to PHY
events.
down. The ingress queue lock was unused and has been removed as part of
these changes.
- An in-flight egress update from the SGE must be handled before the
queue that requested it is destroyed. Wait for the update to arrive.
- Interrupt handlers must stop processing rx events for a queue before
the queue is destroyed. Events that have not yet been processed
should be ignored once the queue disappears.
MFC after: 1 week
from scratch. Remove htole16() calls, rxon.chan is an uint8_t,
ieee80211_chan2ieee() does return an ic_ieee as an int, but I heavily
doubt a htole16() will buy us anything here.
- IWN_TXOP_TO_US is equal to IEEE80211_TXOP_TO_US
- use IEEE80211_DUR_TU
- ieee80211_add_rates/ieee80211_add_xrates are public, use em
- copied ieee80211_add_ssid it is not public
Instead of spinning in a tight loop for up to 15 seconds, polling for device
readiness while it spins up, return reset completion just after PHY reports
"connect well" or 100ms connection timeout. If device was found, use callout
for checking device readiness with 100ms period up to full 31 second timeout.
This fixes system freeze for 5-10 seconds on drives hot plug-in.
- make SATA SIMs announce capabilities to handle SDB with Notification bit;
- make PMP driver honor this SIMs capability;
- make SATA XPT to negotiate and enable this feature for ATAPI devices.
This feature allows supporting SATA ATAPI devices to inform system about
some events happened, that may require attention. In my case this allows
LG GH22LS50 SATA DVR-RW drive to report tray open/close events. Events
reported to CAM in form of AC_SCSI_AEN async. Further they could be used
as a hints for checking device status and reporting media change to upper
layers, for example, via spoiling mechanism of GEOM.
diversity.
This is bit dirty and likely should be revised at a later date,
with an eye to unifying/tidying up the whole diversity setup
and allowing developers to do "tricky stuff" as they desire.
For now, this works.
* add a new method, specifically for doing per-RX packet
antenna diversity
* set that HAL method only if it's Kite and a Kite chip that
does diversity.
* add a diversity flag to the HAL debugging section
* add a check to make sure the kite diversity code doesn't run
on boards that don't require it, as not all Kite chips will
implement it.
* add some debug statements when the diversity code makes
changes to the antenna diversity/combining setup.
controller port readiness (that should set just after PHY ready signal),
reduce wait time from 10s to 1s before trying more aggressive reset method.
This should improve system responsibility in some failure conditions.
Note: this HAL currently only supports the AR9285.
From Linux ath9k:
The problem is that when the attenuation is increased,
the rate will start to drop from MCS7 -> MCS6, and finally
will see MCS1 -> CCK_11Mbps. When the rate is changed b/w
CCK and OFDM, it will use register desired_scale to calculate
how much tx gain need to change.
The output power with the same tx gain for CCK and OFDM modulated
signals are different. This difference is constant for AR9280
but not AR9285/AR9271. It has different PA architecture
a constant. So it should be calibrated against this PA
characteristic.
The driver has to read the calibrated values from EEPROM and set
the tx power registers accordingly.
Instead of spinning in a tight loop for up to 15 seconds, polling for device
readiness while it spins up, return reset completion just after PHY reports
"connect well" or 100ms connection timeout. If device was found, use callout
for checking device readiness with 100ms period up to full 31 second timeout.
This fixes system freeze for 5-10 seconds on drives hot plug-in.
bus driver at detach, hence ehci_detach() does exactly this since r199718.
Submitted by: Luiz Otavio O Souza
MFC after: 7 days
Approved by: thompsa (mentor)
SCSI status errors to CAM (that was wrong, as it too often turned retriable
wire errors into non-retriable REQUEST SENSE errors), do it only for STALL
errors on control pipe of the CBI devices. STALL on control pipe is just
a one of the ways to report error for CBI devices.
PR: usb/150401, usb/154593.
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 1 week
ctl/ext noise floor values.
This routine doesn't check to see whether the radio is MIMO
capable - instead, it simply returns either the raw values,
the "nominal" values if the raw values aren't yet available
or are invalid, or '0' values if there's no valid channel/
no valid MIMO values.
Callers are expected to verify the radio is a MIMO radio
(which for now means it's an 11n chipset, there are non-11n
MIMO chipsets out there but I don't think we support them,
at least in MIMO mode) before exporting the MIMO values.
upper-level HAL.
Right now the per-chain noise floor values aren't used anywhere in
the upper-level HAL, so the driver currently has no real reference
to compare the per-chain RSSI values to.
This is needed before per-chain RSSI values (for ctl and ext radios)
are can be thrown upstairs to the net80211 code.
safer for i386 because it can be easily over 4 GHz now. More worse, it can
be easily changed by user with 'machdep.tsc_freq' tunable (directly) or
cpufreq(4) (indirectly). Note it is intentionally not used in performance
critical paths to avoid performance regression (but we should, in theory).
Alternatively, we may add "virtual TSC" with lower frequency if maximum
frequency overflows 32 bits (and ignore possible incoherency as we do now).
chain to be corrupted.
- Removed many console print warnings and replaced with driver maintained
counters.
- Several style(9) fixes.
MFC after: One week.
improves command timeout handling.
Many thanks to Areca for continuing to support FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Ching-Lung Huang <ching2048 areca com tw>
MFC after: 2 months
This fixes a long standing bug in mxge(4) where "ifconfig mxge0 $IP"
did not bring the interface into a RUNNING state, like it does on
most (all?) other FreeBSD NIC drivers.
Thanks to gnn for mentioning the bug, and yongari for pointing out that
ether_ioctl() invokes ifp->if_init() in SIOCSIFADDR.
MFC after: 7 days
- Add the change made in em to the actual unrefreshed number
of descriptors is used as a basis in rxeof on the way out
to determine if more refresh is needed. NOTE: there is a
difference in the ring setup in igb, this is not accidental,
it is necessitated by hardware behavior, when you reset the
newer adapters it will not let you write RDH, it ALWAYS sets
it to 0. Thus the way em does it is not possible.
- Change the sysctl handling of flow control, it will now make
the change dynamically when the variable setting changes rather
than requiring a reset.
- Change the eee sysctl naming, validation found the old unintuitive :)
- Last but not least, some important performance tweaks in the TX
path, I found that UDP behavior could be drastically hindered or
improved with just small changes in the start loop. What I have
here is what testing has shown to be the best overall. Its interesting
to note that changing the clean threshold to start at a full half of
the ring, made a BIG difference in performance. I hope that this
will prove to be advantageous for most workloads.
MFC in a week.
show that there are perfectly working PM timers with occasional "hiccups",
probably because of an SMI. Now we ignore the maximum if it happens once in
the test loop and the width is small enough. Also, relax normal width a bit
to count in a boundary case.
Unlike other controllers which have more advanced jumbo support,
these controllers have one send ring, one standard receive producer
ring and one receive return ring. In order to receive jumbo frames
on the controllers, driver now will increase Rx buffer size to 9k.
Two Rx modes are supported on these controllers and I chose
standard Rx BDs over extended Rx BDs. The extended Rx BD mode
allows up to 4 segmentations for each Rx BDs such that kernel does
not have to allocate large buffer of contiguous memory for
receiving. The extended Rx BD mode is already used on controllers
that have separate jumbo receive ring. However, using extended Rx
BDs on BCM5714/BCM5715/BCM5780 reduces the number of Rx BDs to 256
entries which in turn may reduce the performance. Also UMA backed
page allocator for jumbo frame returns contiguous memory so using
extended Rx BD has no advantage on FreeBSD unless highly customized
local allocator implemented in driver is used.
To use jumbo buffers in standard receive ring, Rx buffer allocation
handler was changed to allocate MJUM9BYTES sized mbuf.
PR: kern/155192
Tested by: Vijay Singh <vijju.singh <> gmail dot com>
Submitted by: mjacob (initial version)
on the fact that real hardware has almost fixed cost to read the ACPI timer.
It is virtually always false for hardware emulation and it makes no sense to
read it multiple times, which is already quite expensive for full emulation.
From the ath9k source:
==
11N: we can no longer afford to self link the last descriptor.
MAC acknowledges BA status as long as it copies frames to host
buffer (or rx fifo). This can incorrectly acknowledge packets
to a sender if last desc is self-linked.
==
Since this is useful for pre-AR5416 chips that communicate PHY errors
via error frames rather than by on-chip counters, leave the support
in there, but disable it for AR5416 and later.
- Add more fields for USB device and host mode
- Add more information to USB PF header so that decoding
can easily be done by software analyzer tools like
Wireshark.
- Optimise usbdump to display USB streams in text format
more efficiently.
- Software using USB PF must be recompiled after
this commit, due to structure changes.
MFC after: 7 days
Approved by: thompsa (mentor)
environments into the kernel environment.
The eventual aim is to replace these with specific drivers for
the various bootloaders (redboot, uboot, etc.) This however will
work for the time being until it can be properly addressed.
Submitted by: Aleksandr Rybalko <ray@dlink.ua>
get's defragged due to a mapping failure the header
pointers will be invalidated and can result in a
TSO or other failure down the line. So, when the
remapping occurs force a retry thru the offload
calculation code. Thanks to Andrew Boyer for discovering
this and cooking up the fix!!
to calculate the outstanding descriptors that need to be
refreshed at any time, and use THAT in rxeof to determine
if refreshing needs to be done. Also change the local_timer
to simply fire off the appropriate interrupt rather than
schedule a tasklet, its simpler.
MFC in two weeks
bus driver will now remember the size of a BAR obtained during the initial
bus scan and use that size when doing lazy resource allocation rather than
resizing the BAR. The bus driver will now also report unallocated BARs to
userland for display by 'pciconf -lb'. Psuedo-resources that are not BARs
(such as the implicit I/O port resources for master/slave ATA controllers)
will no longer be listed as BARs in 'pciconf -lb'. During resume, BARs are
restored from their new saved state instead of having the raw registers
saved and restored across resume. This also fixes restoring BARs at
unusual loactions if said BAR has been allocated by a driver.
Add a constant for the offset of the ROM BIOS BAR in PCI-PCI bridges and
properly handle ROM BIOS BARs in PCI-PCI bridges. The PCI bus now also
properly handles the lack of a ROM BIOS BAR in a PCI-Cardbus bridge.
Tested by: jkim
Introduce the AHB glue for Atheros embedded systems. Right now it's
hard-coded for the AR9130 chip whose support isn't yet in this HAL;
it'll be added in a subsequent commit.
Kernel configuration files now need both 'ath' and 'ath_pci' devices; both
modules need to be loaded for the ath device to work.
in the RX path when doing 11n and block-ack'ed frames. Apparently, the MAC
will loop over that self-linked descriptor and treat it as "good enough"
for (incorrectly!) ACKing the frames in the block-ack.
Until I figure out how to work around this issue in the future, this counter
will tell me if packet RX processing ever gets to the point where it's
touching the self-linked descriptor. If there's ever enough packets to get
to that point, BA's will be invalid and likely very unhappy.
of active DMA cycle. dc_setcfg() also has to wait until the DMA
engine is stopped so using a common function to handle the job is
better than duplicating the code.
No objection from: marius
makes controller to receive bad frames and i82557 will also receive
bad frames since fxp(4) have to receive VLAN oversized frames. If
fxp(4) encounter DMA overrun error, the received frame size would
be 0 so the actual frame size after checksum field extraction the
length would be negative(-2). Due to signed/unsigned comparison
used in driver, frame length check did not work for DMA overrun
frames. Correct this by casting it to int.
While I'm here explicitly check DMA overrun error and discard the
frame regardless of result of received frame length check.
Reported by: n_hibma
Tested by: n_hibma
MFC after: 1 week
I'll clear how it's supposed to work with Bernhard and then look
at enabling this in the correct situations.
But this -does- enable HT RTS protection (using the appropriate legacy
rates) if this bit of code is enabled.
by default.
Adventourous souls with an AR9220/AR9280 or later and who have a device
that sends PS-POLL frames may wish to try tinkering with this option and
get back to me.
Linux ath9k only enables this for AR9280 and later NICs; so
create a capability for it so it isn't enabled for earlier
NICs.
Enabling hardware PS-POLL support will come in a later commit
and will be disabled by default.
Even though they map to setting the error filter register,
ath9k also writes them untouched to AR_RX_FILTER.
The Force-BSSID match bit can stay high, as it maps to a
misc mode register setting rather than an RX filter bit.
The phyerr, radar and bssid-match bits aren't real bits, they map
to enabling bits in other registers. Move those out of the way of
valid RX filter bits.
Add a few new fields from ath9k - compba, ps-poll, mcast-bcast-all.
Changes since 7.8.0 (from the official changelog):
- Fixed sporadic interrupt generation for associated CQ when processing
a local invalidate work request
- Changes to core scheduling to avoid starving requests from the host
under heavy RDMA Read Request load (e.g. packets to the wire)
- Programmed the tp tx resource limiter in function of the traffic (only
affects iWarp)
- Increased the egress NIC gather list length from 36 to 46 entries
MFC after: 1 week
the channel width is ni->ni_chw, which is set to the negotiated channel
width. ni->ni_htflags is the capability, rather than the negotiated
value.
Teach both the TX path and the sample rate module about this.
This seems to work fine for STA but not HT/20 AP mode.
Further discussion with net80211 people will need to take place
to ensure that the right flags are set based on the negotiated
capabilities of the remote peer, rather than whatever the local
parameters are.
Sending short-gi frames in 20mhz may work on some chips but
it certainly isn't supported on anything currently supported
by the HAL; and sending HT40 frames in HT20 mode just plain
won't work.
settings, it seems that our defines are backwards and don't match what
is in the EEPROM documentation or internal driver.
The ath9k code used to have a bitfield here, rather than a uint8_t, and
there were #defines used to swap the order based on the endian of the
platform - this wasn't because of nybble or bit ordering of the
underlying host but because of what the compiler was doing.
This may be the reason for the backwards field numbers, as ath9k had
similar issues.
the AR9285 so I'll leave it off for that.
Ath9k sources indiciate that one of the ANI modes interferes with
RIFS detection, so match ath9k and disable that.
* The existing interrupt mitigation code didn't mitigate anything - the
per-packet TX/RX interrupts are still occuring. It's possible this
worked for the AR5416 but not any later chipsets; I'll investigate and
update as needed.
* Set both the RX and TX threshold registers whilst I'm at it.
This is verified to work on the AR9220 and AR9160. I'm leaving it off
by default in case it's truely broken, but I need to have it enabled
when doing 11n testing or interrupt loads exceed 10,000 interrupts/sec.
queue has its own interrupt. If the exact number that we need is not a
power of 2 and we're using MSI, then switch to interrupt multiplexing.
While here, replace the magic numbers with something more readable.
MFC after: 3 days
At least one AR5416 user has reported measurable throughput drops
with this option. For now, disable it and make it a run-time
twiddle. It won't take affect until the next radio programming
trip though (eg channel scan, channel change.)
so there's no need to enable the RX of invalid frames just to do ANI.
The if_ath code and AR5212 ANI code setup the RX filter bits to enable
receiving OFDM/CCK errors if the device doesn't have the hardware
MIB counters. It isn't initialising it for the AR5416+ because all of
those chips have hardware MIB counters.
This fixes the odd (and performance affecting!) situation where if ani
is enabled (via sysctl dev.ath.X.intmit) then suddenly there's be a very
large volume of phy errors - which is good to track, but not what was
intended. Since each PHY error is a received (0 length) frame, it can
significantly tie up the RX side of things.
It's still not ready for prime-time - there's some TX niggles with these 11n
cards that I'm still trying to wrap my head around, and AMPDU-TX is just not
implemented so things will come to a crashing halt if you're not careful.
"extended capabilities" to refer to the new set of capability structures
starting at offset 0x100 in config space for PCI-express devices. For now
both function names will still work. I will merge this to older branches
to ease driver portability, but 9.0 will ship with a new pci_find_extcap()
function that locates extended capabilities instead.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 week
This fix modifies the const addac initval array, rather than modifying
a local copy. It means that running >1 AR9160 on a board may prove to
be unpredictable.
The AR5416 init path also does something similar, so supporting
>1 AR5416 of different revisions could cause problems.
The later fix will be to create a private copy of the Addac data
for the AR5416, AR9160 (and AR9100 when it's merged in) and then
modify that as needed.
Obtained From: Linux ath9k
I found this when trying to figure out why the RX PHY error count
didn't match the OFDM error count ANI was using. It turns out
there was two problems:
* What this commit addresses - using the wrong mask for OFDM errors,
and
* The RX filter is set incorrectly after a channel scan (at least)
even if interference mitigation is enabled by default.
ANI is still disabled by default for the AR5416 and later chips.
bring it in line with the rest of the register initialisation.
I've verified that the 2/5ghz board values written to the
chip match what was previously written.
* add pspoll/uapsd queue setup defaults;
* enable the exponential backoff window rather than the random
backoff window when doing TX contention management.
would be a problem, make sure it isn't overwritten by whatever is in
there at cold reset.
This brings the > ar5416 init path treatment of AR_MISC_MODE.
report descriptor information, sysctl utility
will show it for us.
- Modify sysctl node description to make it more
understanable.
Found by: Alexander Best <arundel@freebsd.org>
Submitted by: Eygene Ryabinkin <rea@freebsd.org>
MFC after: 14 days
Approved by: thompsa (mentor)
value is updated after that we read it in the queue-head. This patch can
fix problems with BULK timeouts. The issue was found on a Nvidia chipset.
MFC after: 14 days
Approved by: thompsa (mentor)
* Pull out the static rix stuff into a different function
* I know this may slightly drop performance, but check if a static
rix is needed before each packet TX.
* Whilst I'm at it, add a little extra debugging to the rate
control stuff to make it easier to follow what's going on.
Give it a good go (32 attempts) and then print out a warning that's
going to occur whether HAL debugging is enabled or not. Then don't
abort the radio setup; just continue merrily along.
This should fix the issue that users were having where scanning would
occasionally fail on the active channel, causing traffic to cease
until the radio scanned again.
not needed.
These calibrations are only applicable if the chip operating mode
engages both interleaved RX ADCs (ie, it's compensating for the
differences in DC gain and DC offset -between- the two ADCs.)
Otherwise the chip reads values of 0x0 for the secondary ADC
(as I guess it's not enabled here) and thus writes potentially
bogus info into the chip.
I've tested this on the AR9160 and AR9280; both behave themselves
in 11g mode with these calibrations disabled.
for fixing them based on the ath9k related TXQ fixes.
I've done this so people can go over the history of the diffs to the original
AR5212 routines (which AR5416 and later chips use) to see what's changed.
enables broadcast filtering. Make sure to clear the bit to receive
broadcast frames. While I'm here rename the bit definition to
reflect reality.
Reported by: brad@OpenBSD
MFC after: 1 week
This commit really is "fix the OFDM duration calculation to match reality when
running in 802.11g mode."
The AR5212 init vals set AR_MISC_MODE to 0x0 and all the bits that can be set are
set through code.
The AR5416 and later initvals set AR_MISC_MODE to various other values (with
the AR5212 AR_MISC_MODE options cleared), which include AR_PCU_CCK_SIFS_MODE .
This adds 6uS to SIFS on non-CCK frames when transmitting.
This fixes the issue where _DATA_ 802.11g OFDM frames were being TX'ed with
the ACK duration set to 38uS, not 44uS as on the AR5212 (and other devices.)
The AR5212 TX pathway obeys the software-programmed duration field in the packet,
but the 11n TX pathway overrides that with a hardware-calculated duration. This
was getting it wrong because of the above AR_MISC_MODE setting. I've verified
that 11g data OFDM frames are now being TXed with the correct ACK+SIFS duration
programmed in.
Since ath9k does some slightly different bit fiddling when setting up
the TX queues, it may that the TX queue setup/reset functions will need
overriding later on.
been undergoing test for some weeks. This improves the RX
mbuf handling to avoid system hang due to depletion. Thanks
to all those who have been testing the code, and to Beezar
Liu for the design changes.
Next the igb driver is updated for similar RX changes, but
also to add new features support for our upcoming i350 family
of adapters.
MFC after a week
chipsets that do not have an HT slave at 0:0:0:0. The Linux quirk is
actually specific to Nvidia chipsets and the check I had added was in
the wrong place.
Prodded by: nathanw
- Always enable the HyperTransport MSI mapping window for HyperTransport
to PCI bridges (these show up as HyperTransport slave devices).
The mapping windows in PCI-PCI bridges are enabled by existing code
in the PCI-PCI bridge driver as MSI requests propagate up the device
tree, but Host-PCI bridges don't really show up in that tree.
- If the PCI device at domain 0 bus 0 slot 0 function 0 is not a
HyperTransport device, then blacklist MSI on any other HT devices in
the system. Linux has a similar quirk.
PR: kern/155442
Tested by: Zack Dannar zdannar of gmail
MFC after: 1 week
With this change, driver may not notice updated descriptor status
change when bounce buffers are active. However, rxeof() in next run
will handle the synchronization.
Change dc_rxeof() a bit to return the number of processed frames in
RX descriptor ring. Previously it returned the number of frames
that were successfully passed to upper stack which in turn means it
ignored frames that were discarded due to errors. The number of
processed frames in RX descriptor ring is used to detect whether
driver is out of sync with controller's current descriptor pointer.
Returning number of processed frames reduces unnecessary (probably
wrong) re-synchronization.
Reviewed by: marius
This does a few things in particular:
* Abstracts out the gain control settings into a separate function;
* Configure antenna diversity, LNA and antenna gain parameters;
* Configure ob/db entries - the later v4k EEPROM modal revisions have
multiple OB/DB parameters which are used for some form of
calibration. Although the radio does have defaults for each,
the EEPROM can override them.
This resolves the AR2427 related issues I've been seeing and makes
it stable at all 11g rates for both TX and RX.
The offsets didn't match the assumption that nfarray[] is ordered by the
chainmask bits and programmed via the register order in ar5416_cca_regs[].
This repairs that damage and ensures that chain 1 is programmed correctly.
(And extension channels will now be programmed correctly also.)
This fixes some of the stuck beacons I've been seeing on my AR9160/AR5416
setups - because Chain 1 would be programmed -80 or -85 dBm, which is
higher than the actual noise floor and thus convincing the radio that
indeed it can't ever transmit.
rather than duplicating them for the v14 (ar5416+) and v4k (ar9285) codebases.
Further chipsets (eg the AR9287) have yet another EEPROM format which will use
these routines to calculate things.
to the TX closed-loop power control registers.
* Modify a couple of functions to take the register chain number,
rather than the regChainOffset value. This allows for the
register chain to be logged.
also does this for sound drivers it's probably not necessary for all
combinations of controllers and drivers. However, given that our sound
drivers completely lack bus_dmamap_sync(9) calls this at least serves
as a workaround when enabling use of the IOMMU streaming buffers on
sparc64 and generally for arm and mips.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Linux ath9k.
The ath9k ar9002_hw_init_cal() isn't entirely clear about what
is supposed to be called for what chipsets, so I'm ignoring the
rest of it and just porting the AR9285 init cal path as-is and
leaving the rest alone. Subsequent commits may also tidy up the
Merlin (AR9285) and other chipset support.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k
The ath9k driver has a unified boundary/pdadc function, whereas
ours is split into two (one for each EEPROM type.) This is why
the AR9280 check is done here where we could safely assume it'll
always be AR9280 or later.
this is incorrect for Kite (AR9285) and any future chipsets that
override the EEPROM related routines.
It meant that a direct call to set the TX power would call the v14 EEPROM
AR5416/AR9280 calibration routines, rather than the v4k EEPROM routines
for the AR9285. It thus read the incorrect values from the EEPROM and
programmed garbage PDADC and TX power values into the hardware.
It looks like these apply in both open and closed loop TX power control,
but the only merlin boards i have either have OL -or- a non-default power
offset, not both.
to both make things clearer, and to make it easier to write userland
code which pulls in these definitions without needing to pull in the
rest of the HAL.
This stuff should be deprecated at some point in the future once
the net80211 regulatory domain support encapsulates all of the
defintions here.
This is something bus clock related from what I can gather. It is needed for
the AR9220 based Ubiquiti SR71-12 and SR71-15 Mini-PCI NICs.
(Note: those NICs don't work right now because of earlier changes to handle
power table offset correctly. That'll be resolved in a follow-up commit.)
Merlin (ar9280) and later were full-reset if they're doing open-loop TX
power control but the TSF wasn't being saved/restored.
Add ar5212SetTsf64() which sets the 64 bit TSF appropriately.
value. Controllers that always require "store and forward" mode(
Davicom and PNIC 82C168) have no way to recover from TX underrun
except completely reinitializing hardware. Previously only Davicom
was reinitialized and the TX FIFO threshold was changed not to use
"store and forward" mode after reinitialization since the default
FIFO threshold value was 0. This effectively disabled Davicom
controller's "store and forward" mode once it encountered TX
underruns. In theory, this can cause watchodg timeouts.
Intel 21143 controller requires TX MAC should be idle before
changing TX FIFO threshold. So driver tried to disable TX MAC and
checked whether it saw the idle state of TX MAC. Driver should
perform full hardware reinitialization on failing to enter to idle
state and it should not touch TX MAC again once it performed full
reinitialization.
While I'm here remove resetting TX FIFO threshold to 0 when
interface is put into down state. If driver ever encountered TX
underrun, it's likely to trigger TX underrun again whenever
interface is brought to up again. Keeping old/learned TX FIFO
threshold value shall reduce the chance of seeing TX underrns in
next run.
generally tidy up the TX power programming code.
Enforce that the TX power offset for Merlin is -5 dBm, rather than
any other value programmable in the EEPROM. This requires some
further code to be ported over from ath9k, so until that is done
and tested, fail to attach NICs whose TX power offset isn't -5
dBm.
This improves both legacy and HT transmission on my merlin board.
It allows for stable MCS TX up to MCS15.
Specifics:
* Refactor out a bunch of the TX power calibration code -
setting/obtaining the power detector / gain boundaries,
programming the PDADC
* Take the -5 dBm TX power offset into account on Merlin -
"0" in the per-rate TX power register means -5 dBm, not
0 dBm
* When doing OLC
* Enforce min (0) and max (AR5416_MAX_RATE_POWER) when fiddling
with the TX power, to avoid the TX power values from wrapping
when low.
* Implement the 1 dBm cck power offset when doing OLC
* Implement temperature compensation for 2.4ghz mode when doing OLC
* Implement an AR9280 specific TX power calibration routine which
includes the OLC twiddles, leaving the earlier chipset path
(AR5416, AR9160) alone
Whilst here, use these refactored routines for the AR9285 TX power
calibration/programming code and enforce correct overflow/underflow
handling when fiddling with TX power values.
Obtained from: linux ath9k
the ataahci(4) and atamarvell(4) drivers share it between the host and
the controller.
- Spell some zeros as BUS_DMA_WAITOK when used as bus_dmamem_alloc() flags.
MFC after: 2 weeks
coherent.
- Add some missing bus_dmamap_sync() calls. This includes putting such
calls before calling reply handlers instead of calling bus_dmamap_sync()
for the request queue from individual reply handlers as these handlers
generally read back updates by the controller.
Tested on amd64 and sparc64.
MFC after: 2 weeks
It defaults to -5 dBm for eeproms earlier than v21.
This apparently only applies to Merlin (AR9280) or later,
earlier 11n chipsets have a power table offset of 0.
All the code in ath9k which checks the power table offset
and takes it into account first ensures the chip is
Merlin or later.
The earlier way of doing debugging would evaluate the function parameters
before calling the HALDEBUG. In the case of detailed register debugging
would mean a -lot- of unneeded register IO and other stuff was going on.
This method evaluates the ath_hal_debug variable before the function
parameters are evaluated, drastically reducing the amount of overhead
enabling HAL debugging during compilation.
- everything related to LRO should be in #ifdef INET blocks
- reorder sge_iq's fields so that the most frequently used are all together
- pull all rx code into t4_intr_data directly
- let go of the ingress queue lock when passing up data
- refill the freelist only if it is short of at least 32 buffers
determining whether to use MRR or not.
It uses the 11g protection mode when calculating 11n related stuff, rather
than checking the 11n protection mode.
Furthermore, the 11n chipsets can quite happily handle multi-rate retry w/
protection; the TX path and rate control modules need to be taught about
that.
* change the BB gating logic to explicitly define which chips are covered;
the ath9k method isn't as clear.
* don't disable the BB gating for now, the ar5416 initvals have it, and the
ar9160 initval sets it to 0x0. Figure out why before re-enabling this.
* migrate the Merlin (ar9280) applicable WAR from the Kite (ar9285) code
(which won't get called for Merlin!) and stuff it in here.
* add dot11rate_label() which returns Mb or MCS based on legacy or HT
* use it everywhere dot11rate() is used
* in the "current selection" part at the top of the debugging output,
otuput what the rate itself is rather than the rix. The rate index
(rix) has very little meaning to normal humans who don't know how
to find the PHY settings for each of the chipsets; pointing out the
rix rate and type is likely more useful.
These flags are just plain wrong - they're the node flags from negotiation,
not the configured flags. I'll jump in later on and figure out exactly
what should be done to properly set these two flags when in both STA mode
(ie, what the AP says is possible and what's configured) and AP mode
(ie, where the AP has a configuration, but then negotiates what's possible
with each node, so per-node configuration can and will differ.)
This allows the 11n 2.4ghz/ht20 mode to associate (but perform poorly still)
and exchange MCS rates with atheros reference APs and a Cisco/Linksys
E3000 AP.
operation. Previously ownership was transferred to hardware before
setting address of new RX buffer such that it was possible for
hardware to use wrong RX buffer address.
While here keep compiler from re-ordering instructions by declaring
descriptor members volatile. Memory barriers would do the same job
but volatile is supposed to be cheaper than using memory barriers,
especially on MP systems.
Submitted by: marius
MFC after: 1 week
mps.c: Hide the 'out of chain frames' warning behind MPS_INFO.
mps_sas.c: Hide the SIM queue freeze/unfreeze messages behind MPS_INFO.
mpsvar.h: Bump the number of chain frames from 1024 to 2048. From
testing, it looks like this makes it less likely that we'll
run out of chain frames, and it doesn't cost much memory
(32K).
MFC after: 3 days
means of allowing vendor specific interface class for audio and MIDI devices.
- Add new quirks for this. The vendor and product list in OpenBSD's
dev/usb/umidi_quirks.c was used as reference.
MFC after: 14 days
Approved by: thompsa (mentor)
causing the size calculation to be truncated to the size of an int
(32-bits on all current architectures).
Submitted by: Anish akgupt3 of gmail
MFC after: 1 week
link flips during alias address insertion or dhclient operation.
While I'm here remove dc_reset() in DC_ISR_BUS_ERR case. Device is
fully reinitialized again in dc_init_locked().
* Turn ath_tx_calc_ctsduration() into a function that
returns the ctsduration, or -1 for HT rates;
* add a printf() to ath_tx_calc_ctsduration() which will be
very loud if somehow that function is called with an MCS
rate;
* Add ath_tx_get_rtscts_rate() which returns the RTS/CTS
rate to use for the given data rate, incl. the short
preamble flag;
* Only call ath_tx_calc_ctsduration() for non-11n chipsets;
11n chipsets don't require the rtscts duration to be
calculated.
It's used to calculate:
* the initial per-rate entries for short/long preamble ACK durations;
* packet durations for TDMA slot decisions;
* RTS/CTS protection durations;
* updating the duration field in the 802.11 frame header
This way invalid durations will generate a warning, prompting for it to be
fixed.
respectively and fix all bus_dma(9) issues seen when bounce buffers
are used.
o Setup frame handling had no bus_dmamap_sync(9) which prevented
driver from configuring RX filter. Add missing bus_dmamap_sync(9)
in both dc_setfilt_21143()/dc_setfilt_xircom() and dc_txeof().
o Use bus_addr_t for DMA segment instead of using u_int32_t.
o Introduce dc_dma_alloc()/dc_dma_free() functions to allocate/free
DMA'able memory.
o Create two DMA descriptor list for each TX/RX lists. This change
will minimize the size of bounce buffers that would be used in
each TX/RX path. Previously driver had to copy both TX/RX lists
when bounce buffer is active.
o 21143 data sheet says descriptor list requires 4 bytes alignment.
Remove PAGE_SIZE alignment restriction and use
sizeof(struct dc_dec).
o Setup frame requires 4 bytes alignment. Remove PAGE_SIZE
alignment restriction and use sizeof(struct dc_dec).
o Add missing DMA map unload for both setup frame and TX/RX
descriptor list.
o Overhaul RX handling logic such that make driver always allocate
new RX buffer with dc_newbuf(). Previously driver allowed to
copy received frame with m_devget(9) after passing the
descriptor ownership to controller. This can lead to passing
wrong frame to upper stack.
o Introduce dc_discard_rxbuf() which will discard received frame
and reuse loaded DMA map and RX mbuf.
o Correct several wrong bus_dmamap_sync(9) usage in dc_rxeof and
dc_txeof. The TX/RX descriptor lists are updated by both driver
and HW so READ/WRITE semantics should be used.
o If driver failed to allocate new RX buffer, update if_iqdrops
counter instead of if_ierrors since driver received the frame
without errors.
o Make sure to unload loaded setup frame DMA map in dc_txeof and
clear the mark of setup frame of the TX descriptor in dc_txeof().
o Add check for possible TX descriptor overruns in dc_encap() and
move check for free buffer to caller, dc_start_locked().
o Swap the loaded DMA map and the last DMA map for multi-segmented
frames. Since dc_txeof() assumes the last descriptor of the
frame has the DMA map, driver should swap the first and the last
DMA map in dc_encap(). Previously driver tried to unload
not-yet-loaded DMA map such that the loaded DMA map was not
unloaded at all for multi-segmented frames.
o Rewrite DC_RXDESC/DC_TXDESC macro to simpler one.
o Remove definition of ETHER_ALIGN, it's already defined in
ethernet.h.
With this changes, dc(4) works with bounce buffers and it shall
also fix issues which might have shown in PAE environments.
Tested by: marius
Previously dc(4) always checked whether there is pending interrupts
and this consumed a lot of CPU cycles in interrupt handler. Limit
the number of processing for TX/RX frames to 16. Also allow sending
frames in the loop not to starve TX under high RX load.
Reading DC_ISR register should be protected with driver lock,
otherwise interrupt handler could be run(e.g. link state change)
before the completion of dc_init_locked().
While I'm here remove unneeded code.
as well as controller has enough free TX descriptors.
Remove check for number of queued frames before attempting to
transmit. I guess it was added to allow draining queued frames
even if there is no link. I'm under the impression this type of
check should be done in upper layer. No other drivers in tree do
that.
ownership to controller before completion of access to the
descriptor. Driver is faking up status word so it should not give
ownership to controller until it completes RX processing.