larger than the receive buffer, we have to receive in sections.
When notifying the protocol that some data has been drained the
lock is released for a moment. Returning we block waiting for the
rest of data. There is a race, when data could arrive while the
lock was released and then the connection stalls in sbwait.
Fix this by checking for data before blocking and skip blocking
if there are some.
PR: kern/154504
Reported by: Andrey Simonenko <simon@comsys.ntu-kpi.kiev.ua>
Tested by: Andrey Simonenko <simon@comsys.ntu-kpi.kiev.ua>
Reviewed by: rwatson
Approved by: kib (co-mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
address so that proper clean up will take place in the routing code.
This patch fixes the bootp panic on startup problem. Also, added more
error handling and logging code in function in_scrubprefix().
MFC after: 5 days
o In bare_probe(), change the logic that determines the maximum
number of processors/cores into a switch statement and take
advantage of the fact that bit 3 of the SVR value indicates
whether we're running on a security enabled version. Since we
don't care about that here, mask the bit. All -E versions
are taken care of automatically.
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.
that will connect all of the various sensors and fan control modules on
Apple hardware with software-controlled fans (e.g. all G5 systems).
MFC after: 1 month
MPC8555(E) has 8 LAWs, so don't make that the default case. Current
processors have 12 LAWs so use that as the default instead.
o Determine the target ID of the PCI/PCI-X and PCI-E controllers in
a way that's more future proof. There's almost a perfect mapping
from HC register offset to target ID, so use that as the default.
Handle the MPC8548(E) specially, since it has a non-standard target
ID for the PCI-E controller. Don't worry about whether the processor
implements the target ID here, because we should not get called for
PCI/PCI-X or PCI-E host controllers that don't exist.
Discussed on hackers and recommended for inclusion into 9.0 at the devsummit.
All support email to devin dteske at vicor dot ignoreme dot com .
Submitted by: dteske at vicor dot ignoreme dot com
Reviewed by: me and many others
from U-Boot, the kernel is passed a standard argc/argv pair.
The Juniper loader passes the metadata pointer as the second
argument and passes 0 in the first. The FreeBSD loader passes
the metadata pointer in the first argument.
As such, have locore preserve the first 2 arguments in registers
r30 & r31. Change e500_init() to accept these arguments. Don't
pass global offsets (i.e. kernel_text and _end) as arguments to
e500_init(). We can reference those directly.
Rename e500_init() to booke_init() now that we're changing the
prototype.
In booke_init(), "decode" arg1 and arg2 to obtain the metadata
pointer correctly. For the U-Boot case, clear SBSS and BSS and
bank on having a static FDT for now. This allows loading the
ELF kernel and jumping to the entry point without trampoline.
a tendency to grow unwieldy so we may want to revisit this in due
time.
o Simplify the CPU reset function by writing to the reset control
register irrespective of whether the CPU has one and automatically
falling back to the debug control register if we didn't reset the
CPU. The side-effect is that we now properly reset future processors
without first having to add the system version to the list.
U-Boot as found on the P1020RDB doesn't like it when we use entry 1
(for some reason) whereas an older U-Boot doesn't mind if we use entry
0. If anything else, this simplifies the code a bit.
correctly during a forced dismount. This required that
the exclusive and shared (refcnt) sleep lock functions check
for MNTK_UMOUNTF before sleeping, so that they won't block
while nfscl_umount() is getting rid of the state. As
such, a "struct mount *" argument was added to the locking
functions. I believe the only remaining case where a forced
dismount can get hung in the kernel is when a thread is
already attempting to do a TCP connect to a dead server
when the krpc client structure called nr_client is NULL.
This will only happen just after a "mount -u" with options
that force a new TCP connection is done, so it shouldn't
be a problem in practice.
MFC after: 2 weeks
as long as this does not happen, we need to fix interfaces to userland
in order to not break run-time accesses to the structure.
Reviwed by: kib
Tested by: pluknet
geometry and partitions may start from withing the first track.
If we found such partitions, then do not reserve space of the
first track, only first sector.
in the new NFS client so that a forced dismount doesn't
get stuck in the VFS_SYNC() call that happens before
VFS_UNMOUNT() in dounmount().
Additional changes are needed before forced dismounts will work.
MFC after: 2 weeks
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
argument for a write RPC when it succeeds for the first one and
fails for a subsequent RPC within the same call to the function.
This makes it compatible with the old NFS client for this case.
MFC after: 2 weeks
(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.
feature_present(3) to dynamically decide whether to use one or the
other family.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 10 days
The task structure might be no longer available.
This also allows to eliminates the need for two tasks in the zio structure.
Submitted by: anonymous
MFC after: 2 weeks
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.
When a transition from link alive to link dead configuration or vice
versa occurs, notify any upstream and / or downstream peers using
NGM_FLOW messagges.
Link state notification using NGM_FLOW messages is modelled around
around already existing code in ng_ether.c.
MFC after: 3 days
virtual ifnets more realistically mimic physical ethernet interfaces.
The main motivation behind this change is to allow for ng_eiface(4)
interfaces to participate in STP if_bridge(4) configurations.
When announcing link status changes, switch to the vnet to which the
ifnet belongs, since it is possible for ng_eiface ifnets to be assigned
to a vnet different from the one in which its netgraph node resides.
MFC after: 3 days
Specifically, a critical_exit() call that drops the nesting level to zero
has a brief window where the pending preemption flag is set and the
nesting level is set to zero. This is done purposefully to avoid races
where a preemption scheduled by an interrupt could be lost otherwise (see
revision 144777). However, this does mean that if an interrupt fires
during this window and enters and exits a critical section, it may preempt
from the interrupt context. This is generally fine as the interrupt code
is careful to arrange critical sections so that they are not exited until
it is safe to preempt (e.g. interrupts EOI'd and masked if necessary).
However, the SMP rendezvous IPI handler does not quite follow this rule,
and in general a rendezvous can never be preempted. Rendezvous handlers
are also not permitted to schedule threads to execute, so they will not
typically trigger preemptions. SMP rendezvous handlers may use
spinlocks (carefully) such as the rm_cleanIPI() handler used in rmlocks,
but using a spinlock also enters and exits a critical section. If the
interrupted top-half code is in the brief window of critical_exit() where
the nesting level is zero but a preemption is pending, then releasing the
spinlock can trigger a preemption. Because we know that SMP rendezvous
handlers can never schedule a thread, we know that a critical_exit() in
an SMP rendezvous handler will only preempt in this edge case. We also
know that the top-half thread will happily handle the deferred preemption
once the SMP rendezvous has completed, so the preemption will not be lost.
This makes it safe to employ a workaround where we use a nested critical
section in the SMP rendezvous code itself around rendezvous action
routines to prevent any preemptions during an SMP rendezvous. The
workaround intentionally avoids checking for a deferred preemption
when leaving the critical section on the assumption that if there is a
pending preemption it will be handled by the interrupted top-half code.
Submitted by: mlaier (variation specific to rm_cleanIPI())
Obtained from: Isilon
MFC after: 1 week
now the preferred typical return value from a probe routine. Discourage
the use of 0 (BUS_PROBE_SPECIFIC) as it should be used very rarely.
Point the reader to the DEVICE_PROBE(9) manpage for more detailed notes
on possible probe return values.
Submitted by: Philip Soeberg philip-dev of soeberg net
be represented:
- A single policy namespace is defined, consisting of four possible
policies: "default" to use the global default, "deferred" to force
deferred dispatch, "direct" to employ direct dispatch where possible, and
"hybrid" which makes a dynamic decision based on CPU affinity, ordering,
etc. Routines are implemented to convert between strings and an integer
namespace.
- A new global variable, netisr_dispatch_policy, subsumes existing global
variables for direct dispatch, forced direct dispatch, etc, and is used
for explicit policy interpretation and composition. Old variables remain
so that they can be exported by legacy sysctls for use by old netstat(1)
binaries. A new sysctl and tunable, netisr.dispatch.policy, accepts the
above strings for specifying a global policy default.
- The protocol registration structure, netisr_handler, grows an nh_dispatch
field, which accepts a per-policy policy override. The default value is
'0', which corresponds to "default", meaning that protocols will accept
the global default policy unless otherwise specified.
- Policies are now interpreted and composed explicitly at various points in
packet dispatch; protocol policies override global policies.
- Protocols grow the ability to express a non-opinion about affinity even
when implenting m2cpuid by returning NETISR_CPUID_NONE. In that case, the
framework falls back on source ordering, rather than simply using the
current CPU.
These changes are in support of allowing link layer re-dispatch based on
RSS or similar hashes provided by NICs, especially in the case where the
number of hardware receive queues matches hardware core count, rather than
hardware thread count, requiring further software redistributeon. (i.e.,
on RMI XLR).
MFC after: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: bz
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Alexander Best (arundel@).
For clang, -fdiagnostics-show-option is enabled by default, but for gcc it
isn't. This option will report which -W* flag was responsible for triggering
a certain warning. This will bring gcc warnings closer to the ones clang emits
and might also help developers track down tinderbox failures a bit quicker.
Submitted by: arundel
on top of epair(4) virtual interfaces, since there's no physical
hardware associated with epair interfaces which would imply any
constraints on MTU sizes.
MFC after: 3 days
by borrowing the skeleton of if_media manipulation and reporting
code from if_lagg(4). The main motivation behind this change is
to allow for epair(4) interfaces to participate in STP if_bridge(4)
configurations.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 3 days
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.
Fix arguments passing to _long() version of atomic function for mips.
The native implementation is bogus in that regard and offers the same
problem solved for powerpc as r222198, but mips' guys just wanted a
small and self-contained patch for mips rather than rewriting the
whole support.
Reviewed by: art, imp
Tested by: gonzo
MFC after: 2 weeks
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.
reworking of inpcbinfo locking:
(1) Convert inpcb reference counting from manually manipulated integers to
the refcount(9) KPI. This allows the refcount to be managed atomically
with an inpcb read lock rather than write lock, or even with no inpcb
lock at all. As a result, in_pcbref() also no longer requires an inpcb
lock, so can be performed solely using the lock used to look up an
inpcb.
(2) Shift more inpcb freeing activity from the in_pcbrele() context (via
in_pcbfree_internal) to the explicit in_pcbfree() context. This means
that the inpcb refcount is increasingly used only to maintain memory
stability, not actually defer the clean up of inpcb protocol parts.
This is desirable as many of those protocol parts required the pcbinfo
lock, which we'd like not to acquire in in_pcbrele() contexts. Document
this in comments better.
(3) Introduce new read-locked and write-locked in_pcbrele() variations,
in_pcbrele_rlocked() and in_pcbrele_wlocked(), which allow the inpcb to
be properly unlocked as needed. in_pcbrele() is a wrapper around the
latter, and should probably go away at some point. This makes it
easier to use this weak reference model when holding only a read lock,
as will happen in the future.
This may well be safe to MFC, but some more KBI analysis is required.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
in_pcb_lport(), in_pcblookup_local(), and in_pcblookup_hash(), and similarly
for IPv6 functions. In the future, we would like to support other flags
relating to locking strategy.
This change doesn't appear to modify the KBI in practice, as callers already
passed in INPLOOKUP_WILDCARD rather than a simple boolean.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: bz
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
(1) Add a locking guide for inpcbinfo.
(2) Annotate inpcbinfo fields with synchronisation information; not all
annotations are 100% satisfactory.
(3) Reorder inpcbinfo fields so that the lock is at the head of the
structure, and close to fields it protects.
(4) Sort fields that will eventually be hashlock/pcbgroup-related together
even though they remain locked by ipi_lock for now.
Reviewed by: bz
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
X-MFC after: KBI analysis required
Increase the size of cg_count in order to enable usage of > 127 CPUs.
cg_children is also bumped in order to keep the structure naturally
padded, even if this is not strictly necessary.
Submitted and tested by: sbruno
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
least significant cpuset_t word at the outmost right part of the string
(more far from the beginning of it). This follows the natural build of
bits rappresentation in the words.
wihtout updating world (good transition aide for -current, but also
allows kernels to be built on -stable the old way too). This likely
should go away around FreeBSD 10.0 or so.
WITH{OUT,}_KERNEL_SYMBOLS (defaulting to WITH). In the fullness of
time, likely around 2020, INSTALL_NODEBUG will be removed. For now,
don't print a warning when using INSTALL_NODEBUG, but that will be
coming soon.
method, so that callers can indicate the minimum vnode
locking requirement. This will allow some file systems to choose
to return a LK_SHARED locked vnode when LK_SHARED is specified
for the flags argument. This patch only adds the flag. It
does not change any file system to use it and all callers
specify LK_EXCLUSIVE, so file system semantics are not changed.
Reviewed by: kib
uma_startup2() was called. Thus, setting the variable "booted" to true in
uma_startup() was ok on machines with UMA_MD_SMALL_ALLOC defined, because
any allocations made after uma_startup() but before uma_startup2() could be
satisfied by uma_small_alloc(). Now, however, some multipage allocations
are necessary before uma_startup2() just to allocate zone structures on
machines with a large number of processors. Thus, a Boolean can no longer
effectively describe the state of the UMA allocator. Instead, make "booted"
have three values to describe how far initialization has progressed. This
allows multipage allocations to continue using startup_alloc() until
uma_startup2(), but single-page allocations may begin using
uma_small_alloc() after uma_startup().
2. With the aforementioned change, only a modest increase in boot pages is
necessary to boot UMA on a large number of processors.
3. Retire UMA_MD_SMALL_ALLOC_NEEDS_VM. It has only been used between
r182028 and r204128.
Reviewed by: attilio [1], nwhitehorn [3]
Tested by: sbruno
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
interface is brought down, even though the interface address is still
valid. This patch maintains the permanent ARP entries as long as the
interface address (having the same prefix as that of the ARP entries)
is valid.
Reviewed by: delphij
MFC after: 5 days
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
and destroy_devl() drops dev_mtx. The protection against the race
with dev_rel(), introduced in r163328, should be extended to cover
destroy_devl() calls for the children of the destroyed dev.
Reported and tested by: joerg
MFC after: 1 week
to both NFS clients. This avoids the crash reported by
Sergey Kandaurov (pluknet@gmail.com) to the freebsd-fs@
list with subject "[old nfsclient] different nmount()
args passed from mount vs mount_nfs" dated May 17, 2011.
Tested by: pluknet at gmail.com (old nfs client)
MFC after: 2 weeks
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
(zfs destroy -r pool/dataset@snapshot)
To destroy all descendent snapshots with the same name the top level
snapshot was not required to exist. So if the top level snapshot does
not exist, check permissions of the parent dataset instead.
Filed as Illumos Bug #1043
Reviewed by: delphij
Approved by: pjd
MFC after: together with v28
Note AMD dropped SSE5 extensions in order to avoid ISA overlap with Intel
AVX instructions. The SSE5 bit was recycled as XOP extended instruction
bit, CVT16 was deprecated in favor of F16C (half-precision float conversion
instructions for AVX), and the remaining FMA4 (4-operand FMA instructions)
gained a separate CPUID bit. Replace non-existent references with today's
CPUID specifications.
- Remove the following sysctl:
kern.sched.ipiwakeup.onecpu
kern.sched.ipiwakeup.htt2
Because they are absolutely obsolete. Probabilly the whole wakeup
forward mechanism should be revisited for a better fitting in modern
hw, in the future.
- As map2 variable is no longer used rename map3 to map2
- Fix a string by making more informative the msg and removing the
arguments passing.
Reviewed by: julian
Tested by: several
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.
last CPU to to finish the rendezvous action may become visible to
different CPUs at different times. As a result, the CPU that initiated
the rendezvous may exit the rendezvous and drop the lock allowing another
rendezvous to be initiated on the same CPU or a different CPU. In that
case the exit sentinel may be cleared before all CPUs have noticed causing
those CPUs to hang forever.
Workaround this by using a generation count to notice when this race
occurs and to exit the rendezvous in that case.
The problem was independently diagnosted by mlaier@ and avg@ as well.
Submitted by: neel
Reviewed by: avg, mlaier
Obtained from: NetApp
MFC after: 1 week
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.
is no relevant difference for sbufs, and it increases portability of
the source code.
Split the actual initialization of the sbuf into a separate local
function, so that certain static code checkers can understand
what sbuf_new() does, thus eliminating on silly annoyance of
MISRA compliance testing.
Contributed by: An anonymous company in the last business I
expected sbufs to invade.
choice of default size in the first place)
Reverse the order of arguments to the internal static sbuf_put_byte()
function to match everything else in this file.
Move sbuf_putc_func() inside the kernel version of sbuf_vprintf
where it belongs.
sbuf_putc() incorrectly used sbuf_putc_func() which supress NUL
characters, it should use sbuf_put_byte().
Make sbuf_finish() return -1 on error.
Minor stylistic nits fixed.
Now in the case when one-shot timers are used cyclic events should fire
closer to theier scheduled times. As the cyclic is currently used only
to drive DTrace profile provider, this is the area where the change
makes a difference.
Reviewed by: mav (earlier version, a while ago)
X-MFC after: clocksource/eventtimer subsystem
partition tables and lost an ability to boot after r221788.
Also unhide an error message from bootverbose, this would help to
easier determine the problem.
- Add shorthand aliases for common media+option combinations as announced
by miibus(4) so that one can actually supply the media strings found in
the dmesg output to ifconfig(8).
Obtained from: NetBSD (in principle)
MFC after: 2 weeks
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.
when sending INITs to a global IPv4 address having
only private IPv4 address.
Allow the usage of a private address and make sure
that no other private address will be used by the
association.
Initial work was done by rrs@.
MFC after: 1 week.
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>
the register stack. While the ordering doesn't matter, it creates an
invariant not previously there: the memory stack pointer will always be
larger than the register stack pointer. With this invariant in place,
it's easier to add instrumentation code that detects a stack overflow
because in such a scenario the memory stack pointer and register stack
pointers have crossed each other.
Aside: basic kernel operation needs about half the stack size (~16K)
at most. We have plenty of head room on the kernel stack...
o Clobber the register that holds the restart token immediately after
crossing the restart point. This prevents false positives (i.e. a
nested exception that we don't know can happen and that is being
treated as one we know by virtue of a lingering restart token).
o Now that the bootstrap kernel stack is free, switch onto it and call
trap() for nested traps that we don't know about. In trap we panic()
so that we can analyze the condition.
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
flags are also specified. This change makes use of this behaviour and removes
unneeded -mno-* flags.
Note that clang does not yet enable AVX support for any CPU. However at some
point in the future it will and since we definitely want to disable it for the
kernel, we might as well add the -mno-avx flag now.
Submitted by: arundel
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.
Xen timer and time counter to provide one-shot and periodic time events.
On my tests this reduces idle interruts rate down to about 30Hz, and accor-
ding to Xen VM Manager reduces host CPU load by three times comparing to
the previous periodic 100Hz clock. Also now, when needed, it is possible to
increase HZ rate without useless CPU burning during idle periods.
Now only ia64 and some ARMs left not migrated to the new event timers.
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.
should not change. Fetch the td_user_pri under the thread lock. This
is probably not necessary but a magic number also seems preferable to
knowing the implementation details here.
Requested by: Jason Behmer < jason DOT behmer AT isilon DOT com >
- 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
file and processes information retrieval from the running kernel via sysctl
in the form of new library, libprocstat. The library also supports KVM backend
for analyzing memory crash dumps. Both procstat(1) and fstat(1) utilities have
been modified to take advantage of the library (as the bonus point the fstat(1)
utility no longer need superuser privileges to operate), and the procstat(1)
utility is now able to display information from memory dumps as well.
The newly introduced fuser(1) utility also uses this library and able to operate
via sysctl and kvm backends.
The library is by no means complete (e.g. KVM backend is missing vnode name
resolution routines, and there're no manpages for the library itself) so I
plan to improve it further. I'm commiting it so it will get wider exposure
and review.
We won't be able to MFC this work as it relies on changes in HEAD, which
was introduced some time ago, that break kernel ABI. OTOH we may be able
to merge the library with KVM backend if we really need it there.
Discussed with: rwatson
pc_cpumask were changed to cpuset_t. This now calculates the cpumask based
on pc_cpuid itself as pc_cpumask is slated for being deorbited. Note that
this needs r221750 to be MFC'ed in order to compile.
This seems to work fine but after a few dozens of successful IPIs something
suddenly adds pc_cpuid to pc_other_cpus, causing the respective assertions
in mp_machdep.c to be triggered when the latter is used as the base for the
targets.
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
must not, otherwise we tell the CPU to IPI itself, which the sun4u CPUs don't
support. For reasons unknown so far MD and MI IPI use actually still triggers
that assertion though.
This now calculates pc_cpumask based on pc_cpuid itself as the former is
slated for being deorbited.
This branch now at least boots UP again. MP needs more things converted and
the existing conversion from cpumask_t to cpuset_t still has bugs.
probed and read successfull, but it contains invalid values (e.g.
overlapped partitions, offset or size is out of bounds), then table
will be rejected.
MFC after: 1 month
* revert a local path change that shouldn't have made it to the commit
* fix some indenting/wrapping
* Fix the ale data copy - i should be copying into the ale data pointer,
not over the ale entry itself.
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.
CPU. This fixes a panic observed on Heathrow-based systems without
SMP-capable PICs when the kernel had both options SMP and INVARIANTS.
MFC after: 5 days
* 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
when the user has indicated that the system has synchronized TSCs or it has
P-state invariant TSCs. For the former case, we may clear the tunable if it
fails the test to prevent accidental foot-shooting. For the latter case, we
may set it if it passes the test to notify the user that it may be usable.
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.
I'm not sure whether we should install teken as a library on any stock
FreeBSD installation, but I can imagine people want to tinker around
with it now and then. Create a /sys/teken/libteken, which holds a
Makefile to install a shared library version of the terminal emulator,
complete with a manpage.
Also add Makefiles for the demo/stress applications, to build it against
the shared library.
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
keep constant ISN growth rate, do the same directly inside tcp_new_isn(),
taking into account how much time (ticks) passed since the last call.
On my test systems this decreases idle interrupt rate from 140Hz to 70Hz.
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.
was not updated to pass CRD_F_KEY_EXPLICIT flag to opencrypto. This resulted in
always using first key.
We need to support providers created with this bug, so set special
G_ELI_FLAG_FIRST_KEY flag for GELI provider in integrity mode with version
smaller than 6 and pass the CRD_F_KEY_EXPLICIT flag to opencrypto only if
G_ELI_FLAG_FIRST_KEY doesn't exist.
Reported by: Anton Yuzhaninov <citrin@citrin.ru>
MFC after: 1 week
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
starting from base C types (int, long, etc).
That is also reflected when building atomic operations, as the
size-bounded types are built from the base C types.
However, powerpc does the inverse thing, leading to a serie of nasty
bugs.
Cleanup the atomic implementation by defining as base the base C type
version and depending on them, appropriately.
Tested by: jceel
* 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.
An optical disk may not have a TOC (e.g. for blank media) and userland
software may legitimately try to use CDIOREADTOCHEADER to find out about
the TOC.
Silence from: scsi@
MFC after: 10 days
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.
Transmission error in tun(4) is queueing error(i.e. ENOBUFS) and it
has nothing to do with collision.
Reported by: Zeus V Panchenko (zeus <> ibs dot dn dot ua)
new NFS client. It will then be reduced to whatever the
server says it can support. There might be an argument
that this could be one block larger, but since NFS is
a byte granular system, I chose not to do that.
Suggested by: Matt Dillon
Tested by: Daniel Braniss (earlier version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
This also introduces a new detection path for family 10h and newer
pre-bulldozer cpus, pre-10h hardware should not be affected.
Tested by: Gary Jennejohn <gljennjohn@googlemail.com>
(with pre-10h hardware)
MFC after: 2 weeks
versions instead. They were never needed as bus_generic_intr() and
bus_teardown_intr() had been changed to pass the original child device up
in 42734, but the ISA bus was not converted to new-bus until 45720.
or f_ffree fields of "struct statfs" are negative, since the
values that go on the wire are unsigned and will appear to be
very large positive values otherwise. This makes the handling
of a negative f_bavail compatible with the old/regular NFS server.
MFC after: 2 weeks
This fixes heavy interrupt storm and resulting system freeze when using
LAPIC timer in one-shot mode under Xen HVM. There, unlike real hardware,
programming timer with zero period almost immediately causes interrupt.
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
that are now in "struct statfs" for NFSv3 and NFSv4. Since
the ffiles value is uint64_t on the wire, I clip the value
to INT64_MAX to avoid setting f_ffree negative.
Tested by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
values of error numbers in sys/errno.h will be the same
as the ones specified by the NFS RFCs and that the code
needs to be fixed if error numbers are changed in sys/errno.h.
Suggested by: Peter Jeremy
MFC after: 2 weeks
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
checking at open time. It may improve performance for read-only
NFS mounts. Use deliberately.
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: rmacklem, jhb (earlier version)
native devices which support the v4l2 API from processes running within
the linuxulator, e.g. skype or flash can access the multimedia/pwcbsd
or multimedia/webcamd supplied drivers.
Submitted by: nox
MFC after: 1 month
handling.
The current sequence number code does a few things incorrectly:
* It didn't try eliminating duplications from HT nodes. I guess it's assumed
that out of order / retransmission handling would be handled by the AMPDU RX
routines. If a HT node isn't doing AMPDU RX, then retransmissions need to
be eliminated. Since most of my debugging is based on this (as AMPDU TX
software packet aggregation isn't yet handled), handle this corner case.
* When a sequence number of 4095 was received, any subsequent sequence number
is going to be (by definition) less than 4095. So if the following sequence
number (0) doesn't initially occur and the retransmit is received, it's
incorrectly eliminated by the IEEE80211_FC1_RETRY && SEQ_LEQ() check.
Try to handle this better.
This almost completely eliminates out of order TCP statistics showing up during
iperf testing for the 11a, 11g and non-aggregate 11n AMPDU RX case. The only
other packet loss conditions leading to this are due to baseband resets or
heavy interference.
(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
structure, which acts as a proxy between them. This makes jail rules
persistent, i.e. they can be added before jail gets created, and they
don't disappear when the jail gets destroyed.
and our users complained when broken.
Similarly add LINT-NOINET, and for at least documentation purposes add
LINT-NOIP (which compiles out INET and INET6 and couple of NIC drivers).
Tested by: make universe (if you broke it since you fix it)
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 2 weeks
buffer fills up causing the remote sender to enter into persist mode, but
there is still room available in the receive buffer when a window probe
arrives (either due to window scaling, or due to the local application
very slowing draining data from the receive buffer), then the single byte
of data in the window probe is accepted. However, this can cause rcv_nxt
to be greater than rcv_adv. This condition will only last until the next
ACK packet is pushed out via tcp_output(), and since the previous ACK
advertised a zero window, the ACK should be pushed out while the TCP
pcb is write-locked.
During the window while rcv_nxt is greather than rcv_adv, a few places
would compute the remaining receive window via rcv_adv - rcv_nxt.
However, this value was then (uint32_t)-1. On a 64 bit machine this
could expand to a positive 2^32 - 1 when cast to a long. In particular,
when calculating the receive window in tcp_output(), the result would be
that the receive window was computed as 2^32 - 1 resulting in advertising
a far larger window to the remote peer than actually existed.
Fix various places that compute the remaining receive window to either
assert that it is not negative (i.e. rcv_nxt <= rcv_adv), or treat the
window as full if rcv_nxt is greather than rcv_adv.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 1 month
of the 61 bits available within the region for virtual addressing. Since
there's no good way for us to map out the gap in the virtual address space,
limit KVA to the architectural minimum implemented address bits. This still
gives us 1 petabyte of KVA, so no worries.
developers committing new code with broken include directories.
Fix a few whitespace issues.
Improve a couple of comments.
-W is now deprecated and is referred to as -Wextra (see gcc(1)).
Submitted by: arundel
of endian-ness issues with the AR724x.
From Luiz:
* Fix the bus space tag used so endian-ness is correctly handled;
* Only do the workaround for the AR7240; AR7241/AR7242 (PB92)
don't require this
From me:
* Add a read flush from openwrt
Submitted by: Luiz Otavio O Souza
kern.sched.ipiwakeup.onecpu
kern.sched.ipiwakeup.htt2
Because they are absolutely obsolete. Probabilly the whole wakeup
forward mechanism should be revisited for a better fitting in modern
hw.
- As map2 variable is no longer used rename map3 to map2
- Fix a string by making more informative the msg and removing the
arguments passing
Approved by: julian
function on the possibility of a thread to not preempt.
As this function is very tied to x86 (interrupts disabled checkings)
it is not intended to be used in MI code.
use the PBVM. This eliminates the implied hardcoding of the
physical address at which the kernel needs to be loaded. Using the
PBVM makes it possible to load the kernel irrespective of the
physical memory organization and allows us to replicate kernel text
on NUMA machines.
While here, reduce the direct-mapped page size to the kernel's
page size so that we can support memory attributes better.
kernel configurations to apply WITH_* WITHOUT_* knobs we use for
module building as well to restrict or control opt_*.h flags.
Reviewed by: imp, +
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 2 weeks
to get the files for an IPv6 only kernel as well, remove extra inet6
option where not needed.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
This is reported to work on the AR7240 based Ubiquiti Rocket M5
but I haven't tested it on that hardware. I also don't yet have
it fully working on the AR7242 based development board here;
probe/attach functions but the register space resource looks like
the endian-ness is wrong (0x10000000 instead of 0x00001000).o
Further digging will be required.
Submitted by: Luiz Otavio O Souza
Add some comments at #endifs given more nestedness. To make the compiler
happy, some default initializations were added in accordance with the style
on the files.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
Some bugs where fixed while doing this:
* ASCONF-ACK messages might use wrong port number when using
IPv6.
* Checking for additional addresses takes the correct address
into account and also does not do more comparisons than
necessary.
This patch is based on one received from bz@ who was
sponsored by The FreeBSD Foundation and iXsystems.
MFC after: 1 week
as well compiling out most functions adding or extending #ifdef INET
coverage.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
wrapper around rman_adjust_resource(). Include a generic implementation,
bus_generic_adjust_resource() which passes the request up to the parent
bus. There is currently no default implementation. A
bus_adjust_resource() wrapper is provided for use in drivers.
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
Specifically, these changes allow a resource to back a relocatable and
resizable resource such as the I/O window decoders in PCI-PCI bridges.
- rman_adjust_resource() can adjust the start and end address of an
existing resource. It only succeeds if the newly requested address
space is already free. It also supports shrinking a resource in
which case the freed space will be marked unallocated in the rman.
- rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() return the
start and end addresses for the first or last unallocated region in
an rman, respectively. This can be used to determine by how much
the resource backing an rman must be adjusted to accomodate an
allocation request that does not fit into the existing rman.
While here, document the rm_start and rm_end fields in struct rman,
rman_is_region_manager(), the bound argument to
rman_reserve_resource_bound(), and rman_init_from_resource().
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.
VMware products virtualize TSC and it run at fixed frequency in so-called
"apparent time". Although virtualized i8254 also runs in apparent time, TSC
calibration always gives slightly off frequency because of the complicated
timer emulation and lost-tick correction mechanism.
persist state and the retransmit timer. However, the code that implements
"bad retransmit recovery" only checks t_rxtshift to see if an ACK has been
received in during the first retransmit timeout window. As a result, if
ticks has wrapped over to a negative value and a socket is in the persist
state, it can incorrectly treat an ACK from the remote peer as a
"bad retransmit recovery" and restore saved values such as snd_ssthresh and
snd_cwnd. However, if the socket has never had a retransmit timeout, then
these saved values will be zero, so snd_ssthresh and snd_cwnd will be set
to 0.
If the socket is in fast recovery (this can be caused by excessive
duplicate ACKs such as those fixed by 220794), then each ACK that arrives
triggers either NewReno or SACK partial ACK handling which clamps snd_cwnd
to be no larger than snd_ssthresh. In effect, the socket's send window
is permamently stuck at 0 even though the remote peer is advertising a
much larger window and pending data is only sent via TCP window probes
(so one byte every few seconds).
Fix this by adding a new TCP pcb flag (TF_PREVVALID) that indicates that
the various snd_*_prev fields in the pcb are valid and only perform
"bad retransmit recovery" if this flag is set in the pcb. The flag is set
on the first retransmit timeout that occurs and is cleared on subsequent
retransmit timeouts or when entering the persist state.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 2 weeks