fixes and beacon programming / debugging into the ath(4) driver.
The basic power save tracking:
* Add some new code to track the current desired powersave state; and
* Add some reference count tracking so we know when the NIC is awake; then
* Add code in all the points where we're about to touch the hardware and
push it to force-wake.
Then, how things are moved into power save:
* Only move into network-sleep during a RUN->SLEEP transition;
* Force wake the hardware up everywhere that we're about to touch
the hardware.
The net80211 stack takes care of doing RUN<->SLEEP<->(other) state
transitions so we don't have to do it in the driver.
Next, when to wake things up:
* In short - everywhere we touch the hardware.
* The hardware will take care of staying awake if things are queued
in the transmit queue(s); it'll then transit down to sleep if
there's nothing left. This way we don't have to track the
software / hardware transmit queue(s) and keep the hardware
awake for those.
Then, some transmit path fixes that aren't related but useful:
* Force EAPOL frames to go out at the lowest rate. This improves
reliability during the encryption handshake after 802.11
negotiation.
Next, some reset path fixes!
* Fix the overlap between reset and transmit pause so we don't
transmit frames during a reset.
* Some noisy environments will end up taking a lot longer to reset
than normal, so extend the reset period and drop the raise the
reset interval to be more realistic and give the hardware some
time to finish calibration.
* Skip calibration during the reset path. Tsk!
Then, beacon fixes in station mode!
* Add a _lot_ more debugging in the station beacon reset path.
This is all quite fluid right now.
* Modify the STA beacon programming code to try and take
the TU gap between desired TSF and the target TU into
account. (Lifted from QCA.)
Tested:
* AR5210
* AR5211
* AR5212
* AR5413
* AR5416
* AR9280
* AR9285
TODO:
* More AP, IBSS, mesh, TDMA testing
* Thorough AR9380 and later testing!
* AR9160 and AR9287 testing
Obtained from: QCA
Some code will appear soon that is actually setting the chip powerstate
separate from the self-generated frames power state.
* Allow the AR5416 family chips to actually have the power state changed
from the self generated state change.
Tested (STA mode):
* AR5210
* AR5211
* AR5412
* AR5413
* AR5416
* AR9285
It exposes I/O resources to user space, so that programs can peek
and poke at the hardware. It does not itself have knowledge about
the hardware device it attaches to.
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
the MYBEACON RX filter (only receive beacons which match the BSSID)
or all beacons on the current channel.
* Add the relevant RX filter entry for MYBEACON.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA
* AR9285, STA
TODO:
* once the code is in -HEAD, just make sure that the code which uses it
correctly sets BEACON for pre-AR5416 chips.
Obtained from: QCA, Linux ath9k
the QCA HAL.
This fires off an interrupt if the TSF from the AP / IBSS peer is
wildly out of range. I'll add some code to the ath(4) driver soon
which makes use of this.
TODO:
* verify this didn't break TDMA!
to the hardware.
The QCA HAL has a comment noting that if this isn't done, modifications
to AR_IMR_S2 before AR_IMR is flushed may produce spurious interrupts.
Obtained from: QCA
#gpio-cells property.
Add a new ofw_bus method (OFW_BUS_MAP_GPIOS()) that allows the GPIO
controller to implement its own mapping to deal with gpio-specifiers,
allowing the decoding of gpio-specifiers to be controller specific.
The default ofw_bus_map_gpios() decodes the linux standard (#gpio-cells =
<2>) and the FreeBSD standard (#gpio-cells = <3>).
It pass the gpio-specifier flag field to the children as an ivar variable so
they can act upon.
define a few imx_ccm_foo() functions that are implemented by the imx51 or
imx6 ccm code. Of course, the imx6 ccm code is still more a wish than
reality, so for now its implementations just return hard-coded numbers.
a jtag debugging product, which was used on early Beaglebone boards (later
boards used a standard FTDI 2232C product ID). Change the name accordingly,
and also add an entry for XDS100V3, the latest version of that product
which has its own new product ID number.
Device type and revision is now determined from the bcdDevice field and
doesn't need to be in the table at all. The feature that skips creation
of /dev/ttyU* entries for jtag and gpio interfaces is enhanced:
- The feature is now optional, but enabled by default. A tunable and
sysctl are available to control it: hw.usb.uftdi.skip_jtag_interfaces.
- We no longer assume interface #0 is the only jtag interface. Up to
eight interfaces per chip can be flagged as jtag. (Current ftdi chips
support a max of 4 interfaces; this leaves room for growth.)
- Some manufacturers don't change the product ID or use the same ID for
different devices intended for both serial-comms and jtag/gpio use.
Often while the product ID is the same, the product name string is
different, so it's now possible to search for the product name in a
table of strings and get the set of non-tty interfaces from that table.
- Add a comment about FTDI and ZLPs.
- Correctly check odditiy of baud rate divisor.
- Correct IOCTL handling for "error" and "event" char.
MFC after: 1 weeks
concurrent updates from any completing transmits in other threads.
This was exposed when doing power save work - net80211 is constantly
doing reassociations and it's causing the rate control state to get
blanked out. This could cause the rate control code to assert.
This should be MFCed to stable/10 as it's a stability fix.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA
MFC after: 7 days
The MAC filter set may be called without softc_lock held in the case of
SIOCADDMULTI and SIOCDELMULTI ioctls. The ioctl handler checks IFF_DRV_RUNNING
flag which implies port started, but it is not guaranteed to remain.
softc_lock shared lock can't be held in the case of these ioctls processing,
since it results in failure where kernel complains that non-sleepable
lock is held in sleeping thread.
Both problems are repeatable on LAG with LACP proto bring up.
Submitted by: Andrew Rybchenko <Andrew.Rybchenko at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The existing cleanup code was based on the Atheros reference driver
from way back and stuff that was in Linux ath9k. It turned out to be ..
rather silly.
Specifically:
* The whole method of determining whether there's hardware-queued frames
was fragile and the BAW would never quite work right afterwards.
* The cleanup path wouldn't correctly pull apart aggregate frames in the
queue, so frames would not be freed and the BAW wouldn't be correctly
updated.
So to implement this:
* Pull the aggregate frames apart correctly and handle each separately;
* Make the atid->incomp counter just track the number of hardware queued
frames rather than try to figure it out from the BAW;
* Modify the aggregate completion path to handle it as a single frame
(atid->incomp tracks the one frame now, not the subframes) and
remove the frames from the BAW before completing them as normal frames;
* Make sure bf->bf_next is NULled out correctly;
* Make both aggregate session and non-aggregate path frames now be
handled via the incompletion path.
TODO:
* kill atid->incomp; the driver tracks the hardware queued frames
for each TID and so we can just use that.
This is a stability fix that should be merged back to stable/10.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA
MFC after: 7 days
MAC
* Now that the paused < 0 bugs have been identified, make the DPRINTF()
a device_printf() again. Anything else that shows up here needs to be
fixed immediately.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA mode
MFC after: 7 days
During power save testing I noticed that the cleanup code is being
called during a RUN->RUN state transition. It's because the net80211
stack is treating that (for reasons I don't quitey know yet) as a
reassociation and this calls the node cleanup code. The reason it's
seeing a RUN->RUN transition is because during active power save
stuff it's possible that the RUN->SLEEP and SLEEP->RUN transitions
happen so quickly that the deferred net80211 vap state code
"loses" a transition, namely the intermediary SLEEP transition.
So, this was causing the node reassociation code to sometimes be called
twice in quick succession and this would result in ath_tx_tid_cleanup()
to be called again. The code calling it would always call pause, and
then only call resume if the TID didn't have "cleanup_inprogress" set.
Unfortunately it didn't check if it was already set on entry, so it
would pause but not call resume. Thus, paused would be called more
than once (once before each entry into ath-tx_tid_cleanup()) but resume
would only be called once when the cleanup state was finished.
This doesn't entirely fix all of the issues seen in the cleanup path
but it's a necessary first step.
Since this is a stability fix, it should be merged to stable/10 at some
point.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA mode
MFC after: 7 days
NetFPGA-10G Embedded CPU Ethernet Core.
The current version operates on a simple PIO based interface connected
to a NetFPGA-10G port.
To avoid confusion: this driver operates on a CPU running on the FPGA,
e.g. BERI/mips, and is not suited for the PCI host interface.
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA/AFRL
and normal mode; this makes it possible to compile with the former
by default, but use it only when neccessary. That's especially
important for the userland part.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
this set of patches fixes support for systems with > 32 cores.
Details include
sfxge: RXQ index (not label) comes from FW in flush done/failed events
Change the second argument name of the efx_rxq_flush_done_ev_t and
efx_rxq_flush_failed_ev_t prototypes to highlight that RXQ index (not label)
comes from FW in flush done and failed events.
sfxge: TXQ index (not label) comes from FW in flush done event
Change the second argument name of the efx_txq_flush_done_ev_t prototype to
highlight that TXQ index (not label) comes from FW in flush done event.
sfxge: use TXQ type as label to support more than 32 TXQs
There are 3 TXQs in event queue 0 and 1 TXQ (with TCP/UDP checksum offload)
in all other event queues.
Submitted by: Andrew Rybchenko <Andrew.Rybchenko at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
and finish the job. ncurses is now the only Makefile in the tree that
uses it since it wasn't a simple mechanical change, and will be
addressed in a future commit.
logical volume state changes.
Currently, I view this as a critical fix for users and will MFC this rapidly as
my testing has shown data loss when the disk is failed by removing it when
under some amount of write activity and this code panics the box.
Reviewed by: mav@ scottl@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Yahoo! Inc.
Use soreadable()/sowriteable() in socket upcalls to avoid extra wakeups
until we have enough data to read or space to write.
Increase partial receive len from 1K to 128K to not wake up on every
received packet.
This significantly reduces locks congestion and CPU usage and improves
throughput for large I/Os on NICs without TSO and LRO.
Reviewed by: trasz
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
motherboard. PHY hardware used for the controller responded at
all possible addresses which in turn resulted in having 32 PHYs
for the controller. If driver detects "MSI K9N6PGM2-V2 (MS-7309)"
motherboard, tell miibus(4) PHY is located at 0.
Tested by: Chris H
o Unmute terminal when done with driver replacement.
o Move init fonts to early point.
o Minor cleanup.
MFC after: 6 days
X-MFC-with: r264244 r264242
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
{MIO,SER}5xxxx chips instead of treating all of them as PUC_PORT_2S.
Among others, this fixes the hang seen when trying to probe the none-
existent second UART on an actually 1-port chip.
Obtained from: NetBSD (BAR layouts)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Bally Wulff Games & Entertainment GmbH
tracked BAW actually is.
The net80211 code that completes a BAR will set tid->txa_start (the
BAW start) to whatever value was called when sending the BAR.
Now, in case there's bugs in my driver code that cause the BAW
to slip along, we should make sure that the new BAW we start
at is actually what we currently have it at, not what we've sent.
This totally breaks the specification and so this stays a printf().
If it happens then I need to know and fix it.
Whilst here, add some debugging updates:
* add TID logging to places where it's useful;
* use SEQNO().
match how it's used.
This is another bug that led to aggregate traffic hanging because
the BAW tracking stopped being accurate. In this instance, a filtered
frame that exceeded retries would return a non-error, which would
mean the caller would never remove it from the BAW. But it wouldn't
be added to the filtered list, so it would be lost forever. There'd
thus be a hole in the BAW that would never get transmitted and
this leads to a traffic hang.
Tested:
* Routerstation Pro, AR9220 AP
we did suspend it.
The whole suspend/resume TID queue thing is supposed to be a matched
reference count - a subsystem (eg addba negotiation, BAR transmission,
filtered frames, etc) is supposed to call pause() once and then resume()
once.
ath_tx_tid_filt_comp_complete() is called upon the completion of any
filtered frame, regardless of whether the driver had aleady seen
a filtered frame and called pause().
So only call resume() if tid->isfiltered = 1, which indicates that
we had called pause() once.
This fixes a seemingly whacked and different problem - traffic hangs.
What was actually going on:
* There'd be some marginal link with crappy behaviour, causing filtered
frames and BAR TXing to occur;
* A BAR TX would occur, setting the new BAW (block-ack window) to seqno n;
* .. and pause() would be called, blocking further transmission;
* A filtered frame completion would occur from the hardware, but with
tid->isfiltered = 0 which indiciates we haven't actually marked
the queue yet as filtered;
* ath_tx_tid_filt_comp_complete() would call resume(), continuing
transmission;
* Some frames would be queued to the hardware, since the TID is now no
longer paused;
* .. and if some make it out and ACked successfully, the new BAW
may be seqno n+1 or more;
* .. then the BAR TX completes and sets the new seqno back to n.
At this point the BAW tracking would be loopy because the BAW
start was modified but the BAW ring buffer wasn't updated in lock
step.
Tested:
* Routerstation Pro + AR9220 AP
that are being done by the OS.
For now this'll match up with the "wakeups"; although I'll dig deeper into
this to see if we can determine which sleep state the CPU managed to get
into. Most things I've seen these days only expose up to C2 or C3 via
ACPI even though the CPU goes all the way down to C6 or C7.
o Mute terminal while vt(4) driver change in progress.
o Reset VDF_TEXTMODE before init new driver.
o Assign default font, if new driver is not in TEXTMODE.
o Do not update screen while driver changing.
Resolved by: adrian
Reported by: tyler
MFC after: 7 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
CLOCAL and HUPCL control flags. There are legit reasons for allowing
those to be changed. When /etc/ttys has the "3wire" type (without a
baudrate) for the serial port that is the low-level console, then
this change has no effect.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
other modes supported by the FTDI serial adapter chips.
In addition to adding the new ioctls, this change removes all the code
that reset the chip at attach and open/close time, and also the code
that turned on RTS/CTS flow control on open without any permission to do
so (that was just always a bug in the driver).
When FTDI chips are configured as GPIO or MPSSE or other special-purpose
uses by an attached serial eeprom, the chip will power on with certain
pins driven or floating, and it's important that the driver not do
anything to the chip to perturb that unless it receives a specific
command to do so. When used for "plain old serial comms" the chip
powers on into the right mode and never needs to be reset while it's
running to operate properly, so this change is transparent to most users.
before changing the divisor bits in the register. We were writing a zero
to the register, which clears the enable, but also cleared the divisor bits
at the same time. That's a violation of the sdhci spec, which says the
divisor can only be changed when the clock is disabled. This has worked
okay on most hardware for years, but the TI OMAP controller would misbehave
after changing the divisor improperly.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>
Ensure that first_func is set to 0 on every iteration of the PCI slot
enumeration loop after the first. There is a continue statement that would
cause first_func to stay at 1 any PCI device where slot 0 has no functions
until we find a slot that does have a function. This would cause us to
not enumerate the first PCI function on the device.
Credit to markj@ for spotting the bug.
X-MFC-With: r264011
While I'm here, remove aue_eeprom_getword() as its only usage is to
read station address and make it more readable. This change is
inspired by NetBSD.
With this change, aue(4) should work on big endian architectures.
PR: 188177
default wMaxPacketSize (64 or 512 bytes). This actually helps older FTDI
devices (which were USB 1/full speed) more than the new H-series high
speed, but even for the new chips it helps cut the number of interrupts
when doing very high speed (3-12mbaud).
This avoids extra locking in icl_pdu_queue(); the upper layer needs to call
it while holding its own lock anyway, to avoid sending PDUs out of order.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
PCIe Alternate RID Interpretation (ARI) is an optional feature that
allows devices to have up to 256 different functions. It is
implemented by always setting the PCI slot number to 0 and
re-purposing the 5 bits used to encode the slot number to instead
contain the function number. Combined with the original 3 bits
allocated for the function number, this allows for 256 functions.
This is enabled by default, but it's expected to be a no-op on currently
supported hardware. It's a prerequisite for supporting PCI SR-IOV, and
I want the ARI support to go in early to help shake out any bugs in it.
ARI can be disabled by setting the tunable hw.pci.enable_ari=0.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
Recent FDTI chips have the ability to operate at up to 12mbps. The newer
chips with faster clocks have the same usb vendor/product IDs as the older
chips; the bcdDevice field must be used to detect the newer versions. This
change includes a new function to do that instead of using just the IDs from
the vendor/product table.
The code to choose the baud clock divisor is completely rewritten. In
addition to supporting the new higher clock rates, the rewrite fixes a
longstanding bug in the old code which put the high bits of the fractional
part of the divisor into the wrong place in the wIndex field. That bug
was mostly harmless -- it accidentally didn't affect standard baud rates
and would only show up when using relatively fast non-standard rates.
My PCI RID changes somehow got intermixed with my PCI ARI patch when I
committed it. I may have accidentally applied a patch to a non-clean
working tree. Revert everything while I figure out what went wrong.
Pointy hat to: rstone
out 32 is not enough to support a full sized TSO packet.
While I'm here fix a long standing bug introduced in r169632 in
bce(4) where it didn't include L2 header length of TSO packet in
the maximum DMA segment size calculation.
In collaboration with: rmacklem
MFC after: 2 weeks
o Move vd_bitbltchr vga's driver method to vd_maskbitbltchr.
o Implement new vd_bitbltchr method for vga driver. (It do single write for 8
pixels, have to be a bit faster).
MFC after: 7 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
vt(9) crash on resume fixed, but Xorg still have damaged screen on resume (at
least with i915kms), so better to switch to VT0 before suspend and back on
resume.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Statically allocated terminal window have not initialized callout handler, so we
have to initialize it even for existing window if it is console window.
Reported by: gjb and many
Tested by: gjb
MFC after: 7 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Previous implementation limits put queue size only (when Tx lock can't
be acquired), but get queue may grow unboundedly which results in mbuf
pools exhaustion and latency growth.
Submitted by: Andrew Rybchenko <Andrew.Rybchenko at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
These are needed to diagnose TX hangs that I and hiren are seeing.
Without it, the only way we'll see debugging is by having ATH_DEBUG_SW_TX
enabled and that is going to be very, very spammy.
ATH_DEBUG_RESET is fine; it's only going to be done during stuck beacon
situations in AP mode.
Whilst I'm here, and now that it's behind debugging, let's just disable
the "print only one" conditional. I'll eventually make it more tunable.
Tested:
* AR9220, hostap mode.
create character devices. The deadlock can happen if an application is
issuing IOCTLs which require USB refcounting, at the same time the USB
device is detaching.
There is already a counter in place in the USB device structure to
detect this situation, but it was not always checked ahead of invoking
functions that might destroy character devices, like detach, set
configuration, set alternate interface or detach active kernel driver.
Reported by: Daniel O'Connor <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
MFC after: 1 week
device is asleep.
This doesn't avoid logging errors for things that are actually OK to
access whilst the chip is asleep (eg, the RTC registers (0x7000->0x70ff
on the AR5416 and later.)
But, this is a pretty good indicator if things are accessed incorrectly.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA
This way the state changes from sleep->awake before the registers are poked
and from awake->sleep after the registers are poked.
This way spurious warnings aren't printed by my (to be committed)
debugging code.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA
Yes, this means that sc_invalid is slightly racy, but there are other
issues here which need fixing.
This fixes a source of eventual LORs - ath_init() grabs ATH_LOCK to do
work and releases it before it calls ieee80211_start_all().
ieee80211_start_all() will grab the net80211 comlock to iterate over
the VAPs.
TODO:
* .. I should just migrate the ieee80211_start_all() work to a
deferred task so it can be done later; it doesn't have to be
immediately done.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA mode
then threads can sleep on the pip condition.
Avoid to deadlock such threads by correctly awakening the sleeping ones
after the pip is finished.
swapoff side of the bug can likely result in shutdown deadlocks.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Reported by: pho, pluknet
Tested by: pho
- More flexible cluster size selection, including the ability to fall
back to a safe cluster size (PAGE_SIZE from zone_jumbop by default) in
case an allocation of a larger size fails.
- A single get_fl_payload() function that assembles the payload into an
mbuf chain for any kind of freelist. This replaces two variants: one
for freelists with buffer packing enabled and another for those without.
- Buffer packing with any sized cluster. It was limited to 4K clusters
only before this change.
- Enable buffer packing for TOE rx queues as well.
- Statistics and tunables to go with all these changes. The driver's
man page will be updated separately.
MFC after: 5 weeks
mbuf should be owned by if_transmit function in any case.
Submitted-by: Andrew Rybchenko <Andrew.Rybchenko at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
The NetBSD Foundation states "Third parties are encouraged to change the
license on any files which have a 4-clause license contributed to the
NetBSD Foundation to a 2-clause license."
This change removes clauses 3 and 4 from copyright / license blocks that
list The NetBSD Foundation as the only copyright holder.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
controller initialization.
The spec says OS drivers should send this command after controller
initialization completes successfully, but other NVMe OS drivers are
not sending this command. This change will therefore reduce differences
between the FreeBSD and other OS drivers.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
Replace usage of db_active in Xen console with kdb_active.
Reported by: Andrzej Tobola <ato@iem.pw.edu.pl>
Approved by: gibbs
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
As a prerequisite for multiple queues, the guest must have MSIX enabled.
Unfortunately, to work around device passthrough bugs, FreeBSD disables
MSIX when running as a VMWare guest due to the hw.pci.honor_msi_blacklist
tunable; this tunable must be disabled for multiple queues.
Also included is various minor changes from the projects/vmxnet branch.
MFC after: 1 month
further refinement is required as some device drivers intended to be
portable over FreeBSD versions rely on __FreeBSD_version to decide whether
to include capability.h.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Add support for MSI interrupts in the puc(9) driver. By default the driver
will prefer MSI interrupts to legacy interrupts. A tunable,
hw.puc.msi_disable, has been added to force the allocation of legacy
interrupts.
Reviewed by: jhb@
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
interface, in the r241616 a crutch was provided. It didn't work well, and
finally we decided that it is time to break ABI and simply make if_baudrate
a 64-bit value. Meanwhile, the entire struct if_data was reviewed.
o Remove the if_baudrate_pf crutch.
o Make all fields of struct if_data fixed machine independent size. The
notion of data (packet counters, etc) are by no means MD. And it is a
bug that on amd64 we've got a 64-bit counters, while on i386 32-bit,
which at modern speeds overflow within a second.
This also removes quite a lot of COMPAT_FREEBSD32 code.
o Give 16 bit for the ifi_datalen field. This field was provided to
make future changes to if_data less ABI breaking. Unfortunately the
8 bit size of it had effectively limited sizeof if_data to 256 bytes.
o Give 32 bits to ifi_mtu and ifi_metric.
o Give 64 bits to the rest of fields, since they are counters.
__FreeBSD_version bumped.
Discussed with: emax
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
When running as a PVH guest, there's no emulated i8254, so we need to
use the Xen PV timer as the early source for DELAY. This change allows
for different implementations of the early DELAY function and
implements a Xen variant for it.
Approved by: gibbs
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
dev/xen/timer/timer.c:
dev/xen/timer/timer.h:
- Implement Xen early delay functions using the PV timer and declare
them.
x86/include/init.h:
- Add hooks for early clock source initialization and early delay
functions.
i386/i386/machdep.c:
pc98/pc98/machdep.c:
amd64/amd64/machdep.c:
- Set early delay hooks to use the i8254 on bare metal.
- Use clock_init (that will in turn make use of init_ops) to
initialize the early clock source.
amd64/include/clock.h:
i386/include/clock.h:
- Declare i8254_delay and clock_init.
i386/xen/clock.c:
- Rename DELAY to i8254_delay.
x86/isa/clock.c:
- Introduce clock_init that will take care of initializing the early
clock by making use of the init_ops hooks.
- Move non ISA related delay functions to the newly introduced delay
file.
x86/x86/delay.c:
- Add moved delay related functions.
- Implement generic DELAY function that will use the init_ops hooks.
x86/xen/pv.c:
- Set PVH hooks for the early delay related functions in init_ops.
conf/files.amd64:
conf/files.i386:
conf/files.pc98:
- Add delay.c to the kernel build.
This should not introduce any functional change, and makes the
functions suitable to be called before we have actually mapped the
vcpu_info struct on a per-cpu basis.
Approved by: gibbs
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
dev/xen/timer/timer.c:
- Remove citrical_{enter/exit}, the clock code will already be called
with preemption disabled when needed. Add a comment to that regard
in xentimer_get_timecount.
- Allow xen_fetch_vcpu_time to be called with a specifc vcpu_info
that will be used to fetch current time.
- Assert that xentimer_et_start will always be called with preemption
disabled.
This adds and enables the PV console used on XEN kernels to
GENERIC/XENHVM kernels in order for it to be used on PVH.
Approved by: gibbs
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
dev/xen/console/console.c:
- Define console_page.
- Move xc_printf debug function from i386 XEN code to generic console
code.
- Rework xc_printf.
- Use xen_initial_domain instead of open-coded checks for Dom0.
- Gate the attach of the PV console to PV(H) guests.
dev/xen/console/xencons_ring.c:
- Allow the PV Xen console to output earlier by directly signaling
the event channel in start_info if the event channel is not yet
initialized.
- Use HYPERVISOR_start_info instead of xen_start_info.
i386/include/xen/xen-os.h:
- Remove prototype for xc_printf since it's now declared in global
xen-os.h
i386/xen/xen_machdep.c:
- Remove previous version of xc_printf.
- Remove definition of console_page (now it's defined in the console
itself).
- Fix some printf formatting errors.
x86/xen/pv.c:
- Add some early boot debug messages using xc_printf.
- Set console_page based on the value passed in start_info.
xen/xen-os.h:
- Declare console_page and add prototype for xc_printf.
baudrate of the device special file, and makes sure that on open(2) the
UART is programmed with the correct baudrate. This then eliminates the
need in uart_tty_param() to override the speed setting.
private per-chip HAL.
This allows the ah_osdep.[ch] code to check whether the power state is
valid for doing chip programming.
It should be a no-op for normal driver work but it does require a
clean kernel/module rebuild, as the size of HAL structures have changed.
Now, this doesn't track whether the hardware is ACTUALLY awake,
as NETWORK_SLEEP wakes the chip up for a short period when traffic
is received. This doesn't actually set the power mode to AWAKE, so
we have to be careful about how we touch things.
But it's enough to start down the path of implementing station mode
chipset power savings, as a large part of the silliness is making
sure the chip is awake during periodic calibration / ANI and
random places where transmit may be occuring. I'd rather not a repeat
of debugging power save on ath9k, where races with calibration
and transmit path stuff took a couple years to shake out.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA mode
This fixes kernel panic during boot, caused by incompatibility of recent
CAM locking changes and this bus scanner code.
Submitted by: Microsoft
MFC after: 1 week
Centrino 2230 firmware.
This fixes the general statistics block to be actually valid.
I've verified this by contrasting the output of iwnstats before and
after the change. The general block is now correct.
Tested:
* Intel 5100 (old format stats message)
* Intel 2230 (new format stats message)
(pvid=1) and we already configure them to send to other ports.
Setting pvid=portnum would mean that there were separate vlangroups
for each ports, but 'leaking' into other ports. The result? All port
traffic flooded to all other port traffic.
Tested:
* DB120, AR9344 + AR8327 switch
The OpenWRT AR8xxx switch support flushes the ATU (address translation
unit) after each port link 'up' status change. I've modified this to
just flush on any port transition.
Whilst here, bump the number of ports on the AR8327 to 6, rather than
the default of 5. It's DB120 specific; I'll go and make this configurable
later.
There's some debugging code in here still; I am still debugging whether
this is or isn't working fully.
Tested:
* DB120, AR9344 + AR8327 switch
Obtained from: OpenWRT
This patch does four things:
* it globally disables mirroring;
* it globally sets the mirroring on each port to be disabled;
* the initial port setup now programs a portmask for the port to allow
transmission (forwarding) to all other ports bar itself;
* the vlan setup path now programs the portmask for the port to
allow transmission (forwarding) to all other ports bar itself.
Before this, I hard-coded the portmask to 0x3f which would mean all
ports (bar port 6, which currently isn't hooked up to anything.)
This means that traffic would be duplicated back out the port it
received it. I bet this wasn't .. optimal.
In any case, this _seems_ to make DHCP from my macosx laptop
work through this access point. I'll do some further testing
to ensure it's actually working correctly on all my devices.
Tested:
* DB120, AR8327 switch
It turns out that there's a variant format of the RX statisitcs notification
from the intel firmware. It's even more whacked - the non-BT variant has
bluetooth fields; apparently some later NICs return even _more_ bluetooth
related fields.
I'll commit the statistics structure changes here - it's a no-op for the
driver. I'll later teach the driver code to populate a statistics structure
from the received message after reformatting things correctly.
I don't _think_ it's going to fix anything related to sensitivity programming
as the CCK/OFDM (non-11n) fields are in the same place for both formats.
But the HT structure and the general statistics aren't in the same place.
I'll go find some NIC(s) that spit out the other format and when I find one,
I'll go and update the driver to handle things correctly.
Tested:
* Intel 5100 (which returns the legacy, non-BT format)
Obtained from: Linux iwlwifi
match the device. Pinctrl will need to be added before this will work,
in addition to migrating the current board_foo.c method of configuring
these pins to something else. Non-FDT systems won't be affected, yet.
In my specific case, this fixes the problem of my PowerMac G5 displaying a
4:3 console on a 16:10 display with black bars on the left and right.
PR: kern/180558
Reviewed by: nwhitehorn
MFC after: 5 days
1) Add support for page back/forward.
2) While doing HOR scrolling, disable VER scrolling.
3) Checking dx_sum and dy_sum before emulate right button, this can
avoids unexpected right button press.
4) Fix stable pointer operation when emulating middle button.
Submitted by: Huang Wen Hui <huanghwh@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
It's still hardcoded (for db120) but it is now hardcoded in all the
same place (ie, the pdata path.) The port config/status code now checks
port0/port6 as appropriate to configure things.
Tested:
* Qualcomm Atheros DB120, AR8327 switch.
This is (almost!) enough to actually probe, attach, configure a default
port group and do some basic work. It's also totally hard-coded for
the Qualcomm Atheros DB120 board - it doesn't yet have any of the code
from OpenWRT which parses extra configuration data to know how to program
the switch. The LED stuff is also missing.
But, it's enough to facilitate board, PHY, switch and VLAN bringup,
so I am committing it now.
Tested:
* Qualcomm Atheros DB120
Obtained from: OpenWRT
switches.
* Add some new VLAN HAL methods that will be used by the VLAN configuration
code. The AR933x and later switches use slightly different register
layouts (even though the driver currently doesn't support it.)
- Support for double-tap and drag.
- Support for 2-finger horizontal scrolling which translates to page-back/forward events.
- Single finger tap is equivalent to a left-button press.
- Two-finger taps are mapped to the right-button click.
- Three fingers are mapped to middle button.
- Add sysctl to disable single finger tapping.
- Fix for multiple open of /dev/atp0
- Enhanced support for the Fountain/Geyser family by adding Geyser4.
- Update manual page.
Submitted by: Rohit Grover <rgrover1@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
HAL methods.
This allows the AR8327 code to override it as appropriate.
Tested:
* DB120 - AR8327 and AR9340 on-board switch; only running 'etherswitchcfg'
to check configs. The actual VLAN programming wasn't tested.
The registers (and perhaps the flags) are different for the AR8327, so
I'll stub those out until they're written.
Tested:
* DB120 - both on-chip AR9340 and AR8327 switches.
a single port to setup.
This may end up later being used as part of some logic to program
the PHY for a single port, rather than having to reinitialise them
all at once.
Tested:
* DB120
- intercept FIONBIO and FIOASYNC ioctls on netmap file descriptors.
libpcap calls them to set non blocking I/O on the file descriptor,
for netmap this is a no-op because there is no read/write,
but not intercepting would cause fcntl() to return -1
- rate limit and put under netmap.verbose some messages that occur
when threads use concurrently the same file descriptor.
Before this patch, curvnet was NULL.
When the VIMAGE kernel option is enabled, this eliminates
kernel panics when USB ethernet devices are plugged in.
PR: 183835
Submitted by: Hiroo Oono <hiroo.ono at gmail dot com>
about uss820dci_odevd being unused, by adding it to the part that
handles getting descriptors.
Reported by: loos
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 3 days
rather than SDHCI_RESET_ALL; the latter turns off clocks and power, removing
any possibility of recovering from the error.
Also, double the timeout to 2 seconds. Despite what the SD spec says about
all transactions completing in 250ms or less, I have a card which sometimes
takes more than a second to complete a write.
matching 'compatible' property. This probably has a short half-life (as
do most of the fdt_ functions), but it helps solve some near-term needs
until we work out the larger problems of device instantiation order
versus the order of things in the fdt data.
If the hardware is not in a good state (like maybe clocks aren't running
because of a configuration glitch) its timeout clock may also not work
correctly, and the next command sent will hang that thread forever. The
thread in question is usually the one and only thread (at init time) or
a bio queue worker thread whose lockup will eventually lead to the whole
system locking up when it runs out of buffers.
No sd card command should take longer than 250ms. This new code establishes
a 1-second timeout to allow plenty of safety margin over that.
Normally it never needs to wait here at all; waiting is done at the end
of the prior command. When doing a crash dump, the normal interrupt
mechanism isn't used; instead the interrupt handler is called repeatedly
in a polling-like manner. This can subvert hardware-specific drivers
and lead to trying to start a new command while the previous command is
still busy on the bus. Since the SD spec says the longest a card can
take to execute any command is 250ms, use that as a timeout.
- netmap pipes, providing bidirectional blocking I/O while moving
100+ Mpps between processes using shared memory channels
(no mistake: over one hundred million. But mind you, i said
*moving* not *processing*);
- kqueue support (BHyVe needs it);
- improved user library. Just the interface name lets you select a NIC,
host port, VALE switch port, netmap pipe, and individual queues.
The upcoming netmap-enabled libpcap will use this feature.
- optional extra buffers associated to netmap ports, for applications
that need to buffer data yet don't want to make copies.
- segmentation offloading for the VALE switch, useful between VMs.
and a number of bug fixes and performance improvements.
My colleagues Giuseppe Lettieri and Vincenzo Maffione did a substantial
amount of work on these features so we owe them a big thanks.
There are some external repositories that can be of interest:
https://code.google.com/p/netmap
our public repository for netmap/VALE code, including
linux versions and other stuff that does not belong here,
such as python bindings.
https://code.google.com/p/netmap-libpcap
a clone of the libpcap repository with netmap support.
With this any libpcap client has access to most netmap
feature with no recompilation. E.g. tcpdump can filter
packets at 10-15 Mpps.
https://code.google.com/p/netmap-ipfw
a userspace version of ipfw+dummynet which uses netmap
to send/receive packets. Speed is up in the 7-10 Mpps
range per core for simple rulesets.
Both netmap-libpcap and netmap-ipfw will be merged upstream at some
point, but while this happens it is useful to have access to them.
And yes, this code will be merged soon. It is infinitely better
than the version currently in 10 and 9.
MFC after: 3 days
This change makes ofw_iicbus attach to iicbb(4) controllers in addition to
the already supported i2c host bridges (iichb).
On iicbb(4) allow the direct access of the OFW parent node by its children,
so they can be directly attached to iicbb(4) node on the DTS without the
need of describing the i2c bus.
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
gpioled(4).
Tested on RPi and BBB (using the hardware I2C controller and gpioiic(4) for
the I2C tests). It was also verified for regressions on RSPRO (MIPS/ar71xx)
used as reference for a non OFW-based system.
Update the gpioled(4) and gpioiic(4) man pages with some details and
examples about the FDT/OFW support.
Some compatibility details pointed out by imp@ will follow in subsequent
commits.
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
describe GPIO bindings in the system.
Move the GPIOBUS lock macros to gpiobusvar.h as they are now shared between
the OFW and the non OFW versions of GPIO bus.
Export gpiobus_print_pins() so it can also be used on the OFW GPIO bus.
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
- Get USB input report length from HID descriptor.
- Use 1 finger TAP for devices which has no integrated button.
- Move data buffer to softc instead of allocating it.
MFC after: 1 week
should fix DMA descriptor caching issues seen with the EHCI controller
found in Google Chromebook C720 during removal and insertion of USB
devices.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Matthew Dillon at DragonFlyBSD
I/O windows, the default is to preserve the firmware-assigned resources.
PCI bus numbers are only managed if NEW_PCIB is enabled and the architecture
defines a PCI_RES_BUS resource type.
- Add a helper API to create top-level PCI bus resource managers for each
PCI domain/segment. Host-PCI bridge drivers use this API to allocate
bus numbers from their associated domain.
- Change the PCI bus and CardBus drivers to allocate a bus resource for
their bus number from the parent PCI bridge device.
- Change the PCI-PCI and PCI-CardBus bridge drivers to allocate the
full range of bus numbers from secbus to subbus from their parent bridge.
The drivers also always program their primary bus register. The bridge
drivers also support growing their bus range by extending the bus resource
and updating subbus to match the larger range.
- Add support for managing PCI bus resources to the Host-PCI bridge drivers
used for amd64 and i386 (acpi_pcib, mptable_pcib, legacy_pcib, and qpi_pcib).
- Define a PCI_RES_BUS resource type for amd64 and i386.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 month
hw.cxgbe.rsrv_noflow. When set, queue 0 of the port is reserved for
TX packets without a flowid. The hash value of packets with a flowid
is bumped up by 1. The intent is to provide a private queue for
link-level packets like LACP that is unlikely to overflow or suffer
deep queue latency.
Reviewed by: np
Obtained from: Netflix
MFC after: 3 days
Useful for so-called USB tethering.
- Imported code from OpenBSD
- Adapted code to FreeBSD
- Removed some unused functions
- Fixed some buffer encoding and decoding issues
- Optimised data transport path a bit, by sending multiple packets at a time
- Increased receive buffer to 16K
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Requested by: eadler @
MFC after: 2 weeks
9341-4i controller was to ensure that scatter/gather lists are ended with
an end-of-list marker. Both the mrsas and Linux megaraid_sas drivers use
this marker with Invader cards as well, so we do the same thing, though
it is apparently not strictly necessary.
Reviewed by: ambrisko
Tested by: ambrisko (Invader card)
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
driver as version 8.037.00 for RTL8168{E-VL,EP,F,G,GU} and RTL8111B. This
makes reception of packets work with the RTL8168G (HW rev. 0x4c000000) in
my Shuttle DS47.
- Consistently use RL_MSI_MESSAGES.
In joint forces with: yongari
MFC after: 5 days
are mostly useful for debugging.
- hw.pci.clear_bars ignores all firmware-assigned ranges for BARs when
set.
- hw.pci.clear_pcib ignores all firmware-assigned ranges for PCI-PCI
bridge I/O windows when set.
MFC after: 1 week
Delaying isp_reqodx update, we should be ready to update it every time
we read it. Otherwise requests using several indexes may be requeued
ndefinitely without ever updating the variable.
MFC after: 3 days
a sub-node of nexus (ofwbus) rather than direct attach under nexus. This
fixes FDT on x86 and will make coexistence with ACPI on ARM systems easier.
SPARC is unchanged.
Reviewed by: imp, ian
allow mrsas(4) from LSI to attach to newer LSI cards that are support by
mrsas(4). If mrsas(4) is not loaded into the system at boot then mfi(4)
will always attach. If a modified mrsas(4) is loaded in the system. That
modification is return "-30" in it's probe since that is between
BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT and BUS_PROBE_LOW_PRIORITY.
This option is controller by a new probe flag "MFI_FLAGS_MRSAS" in mfi_ident
that denotes cards that should work with mrsas(4). New entries that should
have this option.
This is the first step to get mrsas(4) checked into FreeBSD and to avoid
collision with people that use mrsas(4) from LSI. Since mfi(4) takes
priority, then mrsas(4) users need to rebuild GENERIC. Using the
.disabled="1" method doesn't work since that blocks attaching and the
probe gave it to mfi(4).
Discussed with: LSI (Kashyap Desai)
to check the status property in their probe routines.
Simplebus used to only instantiate its children whose status="okay"
but that was improper behavior, fixed in r261352. Now that it doesn't
check anymore and probes all its children; the children all have to
do the check because really only the children know how to properly
interpret their status property strings.
Right now all existing drivers only understand "okay" versus something-
that's-not-okay, so they all use the new ofw_bus_status_okay() helper.
process "status" properties of OF nodes.
I've avoided adding new KOBJ methods here so that we don't have to modify
every ofw_bus in the tree. Since 100% of implementations of ofw_bus use
only ofw_bus_gen_*(), it might be worth garbage-collecting the other
methods as well.
The sglist segment array has grown to a bit over 512 bytes (on
64-bit system) which is more than ideally should be put on the
stack. Instead allocate an appropriately sized sglist and hang
it off each Rx/Tx queue structure.
Bump the maximum number of Tx segments to 64 to make it unlikely
we'll have defragment an mbuf chain. Our previous count was
rounded up to this value since it is the next power of two, so
effective memory usage should not change.
Also only allocate the maximum number of Tx segments if TSO was
negotiated.
get the Routerboard 800 up and running with the vendor device tree. This
does not implement some BERI-specific features (which hopefully won't be
necessary soon), so move the old code to mips/beri, with a higher attach
priority when built, until MIPS interrupt domain support is rearranged.
strings and include arbitrary information (IRQ line/domain/sense). When the
ofw_bus_map_intr() API was introduced, it assumed that, as on most systems,
these were either 1 cell, containing an interrupt line, or 2, containing
a line number plus a sense code. It turns out a non-negligible number of
ARM systems use 3 (or even 4!) cells for interrupts, so make this more
general.
This also fixes asserts on removal of the module for the mpc74xx.
The PowerPC 970 processors have two different types of events: direct events
and indirect events. Thus far only direct events are supported. I included
some documentation in the driver on how indirect events work, but support is
for the future.
MFC after: 1 month
r261266:
Add a jail parameter, allow.kmem, which lets jailed processes access
/dev/kmem and related devices (i.e. grants PRIV_IO and PRIV_KMEM_WRITE).
This in conjunction with changing the drm driver's permission check from
PRIV_DRIVER to PRIV_KMEM_WRITE will allow a jailed Xorg server.
/dev/kmem and related devices (i.e. grants PRIV_IO and PRIV_KMEM_WRITE).
This in conjunction with changing the drm driver's permission check from
PRIV_DRIVER to PRIV_KMEM_WRITE will allow a jailed Xorg server.
Submitted by: netchild
MFC after: 1 week
- Use system provided functions for HID report requests.
- Nice the mode setting, because the USB hardware does appear to
handle the commands right away.
MFC after: 1 week
the memory ranges that they decode for downstream devices rather than
creating ResourceProducer range resource entries. The result is that
we allocate the full range to the PCI root bridge device causing
allocations in child devices to all fail.
As a workaround, ignore any standard memory resources on a PCI root
bridge device. It is normal for a PCI root bridge to allocate an I/O
resource for the I/O ports used for PCI config access, but I have not
seen any PCI root bridges that legitimately allocate a memory resource.
Reviewed by: jkim
MFC after: 1 week
that all pressed keys are released before completing the USB keyboard
detach. This will prevent so-called "ghost-keys" from appearing after
that the USB device generating the key event(s) has been detached.
MFC after: 1 week
when activating an I/O or memory window on the CardBus bridge.
Tested by: Olivier Cochard-Labbe <olivier@cochard.me>
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
a timeout value of a single tick is given. With FreeBSD-10 and newer
the current system time is used as a starting point, and the minimum
callout time of a single tick will be guaranteed. This patch mostly
affect the DMA delay timeouts, which are typically in the range from
0.125 to 2ms.
MFC after: 1 week
- Store the length of each read-only VPD value since not all values are
guaranteed to be ASCII values (though most are).
- Add a new pciio ioctl to fetch VPD for a single PCI device. The values
are returned as a list of variable length records, one for the device
name and each keyword.
- Add a new -V flag to pciconf's list mode which displays VPD data for
each device.
MFC after: 1 week
console, it calls the grab functions. These functions should turn off
the RX interrupts, and any others that interfere. This makes mountroot
prompt work again. If there's more generalized need other than
prompting, many of these routines should be expanded to do those new
things.
Should have been part of r260889, but waasn't due to command line typo.
Reviewed by: bde (with reservations)
with USB device detach when using character device handles. This also
includes LibUSB. It turns out that "usb_close()" cannot always get a
reference to clean up its USB transfers and such, if called during the
kernel USB device detach.
Analysis by: hselasky @
Reported by: Juergen Lock <nox@jelal.kn-bremen.de>
MFC after: 1 week
add separate rx/tx ring indexes
add ring specifier in nm_open device name
netmap.c, netmap_vale.c
more consistent errno numbers
netmap_generic.c
correctly handle failure in registering interfaces.
tools/tools/netmap/
massive cleanup of the example programs
(a lot of common code is now in netmap_user.h.)
nm_util.[ch] are going away soon.
pcap.c will also go when i commit the native netmap support for libpcap.
non-modifier key press. This prevents so-called "ghost
keyboards" keeping modifier keys pressed while not
actually seen as a real keyboard.
MFC after: 2 weeks
found in High Speed USB HUBs which translate from High Speed USB into
FULL or LOW speed USB. In some rare cases SPLIT transactions might get
lost, which might leave the TT in an unknown state. Whenever we detect
such an error try to issue either a clear TT buffer request, or if
that is not possible reset the whole TT.
MFC after: 1 week
controller found in the MBP2013 has been observed to not work properly
unless this operation is performed.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested by: Huang Wen Hui <huanghwh@gmail.com>
make CAM to not try negotiate unsupported settings and suppress warnings.
While there, enable command queuing on pass-through devices, announced
in hba_inquiry, but disabled. Even though queue size is very small, It
seems working well enough.
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
The origin of WEP comes from IEEE Std 802.11-1997 where it defines
whether the frame body of MAC frame has been encrypted using WEP
algorithm or not.
IEEE Std. 802.11-2007 changes WEP to Protected Frame, indicates
whether the frame is protected by a cryptographic encapsulation
algorithm.
Reviewed by: adrian, rpaulo
drivers and their firmware were under active development, but those days
have passed. The firmware now exists in pre-compiled form, no longer
dependent on it's sources or on aicasm. If you wish to rebuild the
firmware from source, the glue still exists under the 'make firmware'
target in sys/modules/aic7xxx.
This also fixes the problem introduced with r257777 et al with building
kernels the old fashioned way in sys/$arch/compile/$CONFIG when the
ahc/ahd drivers were included.
Remove old bits of data concat for 'ascii' field.
Remove special SIOCGIFSTATUS handling from if.c (which Coverity yells at).
Reported by: Coverity
Coverity CID: 1147174
MFC after: 2 weeks
WARNING: icl_pdu_check_data_digest: data digest check failed; got 0xf23b,
should be 0xdb7f23b
Tested by: Darcy Birkbeck
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
value. The "Intel Lynx Point" XHCI controller found in the MBP2013 has
been observed to not always set the event interrupt bit while there
are events to consume in the event ring.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested by: Huang Wen Hui <huanghwh@gmail.com>
the spoofed identify data into the user buffer rather than issuing the
command to the controller, since Chatham IDENTIFY data is always spoofed.
While here, fix a bug in the spoofed data for Chatham submission and
completion queue entry sizes.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
Most relevant features:
- netmap emulation on any NIC, even those without native netmap support.
On the ixgbe we have measured about 4Mpps/core/queue in this mode,
which is still a lot more than with sockets/bpf.
- seamless interconnection of VALE switch, NICs and host stack.
If you disable accelerations on your NIC (say em0)
ifconfig em0 -txcsum -txcsum
you can use the VALE switch to connect the NIC and the host stack:
vale-ctl -h valeXX:em0
allowing sharing the NIC with other netmap clients.
- THE USER API HAS SLIGHTLY CHANGED (head/cur/tail pointers
instead of pointers/count as before). This was unavoidable to support,
in the future, multiple threads operating on the same rings.
Netmap clients require very small source code changes to compile again.
On the plus side, the new API should be easier to understand
and the internals are a lot simpler.
The manual page has been updated extensively to reflect the current
features and give some examples.
This is the result of work of several people including Giuseppe Lettieri,
Vincenzo Maffione, Michio Honda and myself, and has been financially
supported by EU projects CHANGE and OPENLAB, from NetApp University
Research Fund, NEC, and of course the Universita` di Pisa.
freeing them.
The current code would walk the list and call the buffer free, which
didn't remove it from any lists before pushing it back on the free list.
Tested: AR9485, STA mode
Noticed by: dillon@apollo.dragonflybsd.org
related to setting up static device mappings. Since it was only used by
arm/mv/mv_pci.c, it's now just static functions within that file, plus
one public function that gets called only from arm/mv/mv_machdep.c.
obsolete. This involves the following pieces:
- Remove it entirely on PowerPC, where it is not used by MD code either
- Remove all references to machine/fdt.h in non-architecture-specific code
(aside from uart_cpu_fdt.c, shared by ARM and MIPS, and so is somewhat
non-arch-specific).
- Fix code relying on header pollution from machine/fdt.h includes
- Legacy fdtbus.c (still used on x86 FDT systems) now passes resource
requests to its parent (nexus). This allows x86 FDT devices to allocate
both memory and IO requests and removes the last notionally MI use of
fdtbus_bs_tag.
- On those architectures that retain a machine/fdt.h, unused bits like
FDT_MAP_IRQ and FDT_INTR_MAX have been removed.
static device mappings.
This SoC relied heavily on the fact that all devices were static-mapped
at a fixed address, and it (rather bogusly) used bus_space read and write
calls passing hard-coded virtual addresses instead of proper bus handles,
relying on the fact that the virtual addresses of the mappings were known
at compile time, and relying on the implementation details of arm
bus_space never changing. All such usage was replaced with calls to
bus_space_map() to obtain a proper bus handle for the read/write calls.
This required adjusting some of the #define values that map out hardware
registers, and some of them were renamed in the process to make it clear
which were defining absolute physical addresses and which were defining
offsets. (The ones that just define offsets don't appear to be referenced
and probably serve no value other than perhaps documentation.)
Using unmapped BIOs causes failure inside bus_dmamap_sync, since
this function requires valid MVA address, which is not present
if mapping is not set up.
Submitted by: Wojciech Macek <wma@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Atmel boards I have.
# All Samsung, Toshiba and SanDisk parts will need to be in this table
# since they don't conform to the ONFI specification (they are all Toggle
# parts). There's some standards for the additional bytes so there's some hope
# to decode them automatically on a per-vendor basis, but even that has
# problems (and is what motivated the ONFI parameter page).
header is split out into its own BD for processing by the firmware. When
this split occurred the data length in the BD was not being set correctly
resulting in packet corruption.
Approved by: davidcd (mentor)
by receive code waiting for data digest even when the data segment was
empty. It didn't actually read it, but it waited until those four bytes
become available in the socket buffer, i.e. until any other PDU (such as NOP)
came in.
PR: kern/185240
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Nuke code setting PCI_POWERSTATE_D0; pci(4) already does that for type 0
devices.
- There's no need to keep track of resource IDs.
- Quiesce the interrupt before actually detaching.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
MFC after: 1 week
- Nuke code setting PCI_POWERSTATE_D0; pci(4) already does that for type 0
devices.
- Use PCIR_BAR instead of a homegrown macro.
- There's no need to keep track of resource IDs.
- Quiesce the interrupt before actually detaching.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
MFC after: 1 week
- Nuke code setting PCI_POWERSTATE_D0; pci(4) already does that for type 0
devices.
- Use PCIR_BAR instead of a homegrown macro.
- There's no need to keep track of resource IDs.
- Quiesce the interrupt before actually detaching.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
- Nuke dupe $FreeBSD$.
MFC after: 1 week
hw.ral.msi_disable (defaulting to using MSI).
- Probe with BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT instead of 0.
- Nuke code setting PCI_POWERSTATE_D0; pci(4) already does that for type 0
devices.
- Use PCIR_BAR instead of a homegrown macro.
- There's no need to keep track of resource IDs.
- Release resources again in case attaching fails.
- Quiesce the interrupt before detaching.
- Sprinkle const.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
- Trim headers.
- Nuke dupe $FreeBSD$.
MFC after: 1 week
- #if 0 the currently unused paired port linking and unlinking of dual
adapters.
- Simplify MSI/MSI-X allocation and release. For a single one, we don't need
to fiddle with the MSI/MSI-X count and pci_release_msi(9) is smart enough
to just do nothing in case of INTx.
- Canonicalize actions taken on attach failure and detach.
- Remove the remainder of incomplete support for older FreeBSD versions.
MFC after: 1 week
- Simplify MSI allocation and release. For a single one, we don't need to
fiddle with the MSI count and pci_release_msi(9) is smart enough to just
do nothing in case of INTx.
- Don't allocate MSI as RF_SHAREABLE.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
MFC after: 1 week
- Based on lessons learnt with dc(4) (see r185750), add bus space barriers to
the MII bitbang read and write functions as well as to instances of page
switching.
- Add missing locking to ed_ifmedia_{upd,sts}().
- Canonicalize some messages.
- Based on actual functionality, ED_TC5299J_MII_DIROUT should be rather named
ED_TC5299J_MII_DIRIN.
- Remove unused headers.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
MFC after: 1 week
fiddle with the MSI count and pci_release_msi(9) is smart enough to just
do nothing in case of INTx.
- Don't allocate MSI as RF_SHAREABLE.
MFC after: 1 week
better off living in aac_pci.c, but it doesn't seem worth creating a
aac_pci_detach() and it's also not the first PCI-specific bit in aac.c
MFC after: 3 days
This chip doesn't require the temperature sensor offset, either v1 or
v2. Doing so causes the initial calibration test to fail.
Tested:
* Intel Centrino 6150
by removing unsued file local functions and then unused callees.
A lot more warnings to resolve but someone had to break the ice.
MFC after: 10 days
X-Comment: I am not the new maintainer; chime in, it's ours.
o Forward termianl framebuffer ioctl to fbd.
o Forward terminal mmap request to fbd.
o Move inclusion of sys/conf.h to vt.h.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The priority goes from "error" to "debug".
Connectors are polled every 10 seconds. Reading EDID is part of this
polling. However, when an invalid EDID is returned, this error message
is logged. When using Newcons for instance, having a kernel message
every 10 seconds is getting annoying.
Now that it's a debug message, it'll be logged only if hw.dri.debug is
enabled. This fix console spamming for some users.
Tested by: Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org>
clients. Mask RX interrupts while grabbed on the atmel serial
driver. This UART interrupts every character. When interrupts are
enabled at the mountroot> prompt, this means the ISR eats the
characters. Rather than try to create a cooperative buffering system
for the low level kernel console, instead just mask out the ISR. For
NS8250 and decsendents this isn't needed, since interrupts only happen
after 14 or more characters (depending on the fifo settings). Plumb
such that these are optional so there's no change in behavior for all
the other UART clients. ddb worked on this platform because all
interrupts were disabled while it was running, so this problem wasn't
noticed. The mountroot> issue has been around for a very very long
time.
MFC after: 3 days
... for msleep/cv_*wait() return values, where wait_event*() is used
on Linux. ERESTARTSYS is the return code expected by callers when the
operation was interrupted.
For instance, this is the case of radeon_cs_ioctl() (radeon_cs.c): if
an error occurs, and the code isn't ERESTARTSYS (eg. EINTR), it logs an
error.
Note that ERESTARTSYS is defined as ERESTART, but this keeps callers'
code close to Linux.
Submitted by: avg@ (previous version)
Normal and bold fonts each have a glyph map for single or left half-
glyphs, and right half glyphs. The flag TF_CJK_RIGHT in term_char_t
requests the right half-glyph.
Reviewed by: ed@
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The previous code was checking the "VGA Enable" bit on the video card's
parent PCI-to-PCI bridge only. This didn't work for the case where the
video card is attached to the root PCI bus (ie. the card has no parent
PCI-to-PCI bridge).
Now, the new code:
1. checks the "VGA Enable" bit on the parent bridge only if it's a
PCI-to-PCI bridge;
2. always checks the "I/O" and "Memory address space decoding" bits
on the video card itself.
However, vendor-specific bits are not used.
This fixes the use of many integrated Radeon cards: without this patch,
we fail to detect them as the boot display and, when radeonkms looks for
the Video BIOS, it skips the shadow copy made by the System BIOS. It
then fails to fully initialize the card, because the shadow copy is the
only way to read the Video BIOS in these situations. A workaround was to
force the boot display selection using the "hw.pci.default_vgapci_unit"
tunable.
A previous version of this patch added a new function doing the checks.
Now, the vga_pci_is_boot_display() function is used to perform the
checks (only until the boot display is found) and return if the given
device is the boot display or not.
Furthermore, vga_pci_attach() logs "Boot video device" if the card being
attached it the Chosen One:
vgapci0: <VGA-compatible display> [...]
vgapci0: Boot video device
Reviewed by: kib@, jhb@ (both a previous version)
Tested by: lunatic_ (#freebsd-xorg, integrated Radeon card,
xmj (#freebsd-xorg, i915+NVIDIA cards)
Introduce a new formatting bit (TF_CJK_RIGHT) that is set when putting a
cell that is the right part of a CJK fullwidth character. This will
allow drivers like vt(9) to support fullwidth characters properly.
emaste@ has a patch to extend vt(9)'s font handling to increase the
number of Unicode -> glyph maps from 2 ({normal,bold)} to 4
({normal,bold} x {left,right}). This will need to use this formatting
bit to determine whether to draw the left or right glyph.
Reviewed by: emaste
using cpuid can be quirky (this is the case of VMWare without the
vPMC support) but fail to probe hwpmc.
o Apply the fix for XEON family of processors as established by
315338-020 document (bug AJ85).
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division
Reviewed by: fabient
Previously the code would just iterate over the whole tree as if it were
just a list.
Without this change I would observe X server becoming more and more
jerky over time.
MFC after: 5 days
in6addr_any and is not in the CLIP table either. This fixes a reported
TOE+IPv6 NULL-dereference panic in do_pass_open_rpl().
While here, stop creating hardware servers for any loopback address.
It's just a waste of server tids.
MFC after: 1 week
Some Intel XHCI controlles timeout processing so-called "TRBs" when
the final LINK TRB of a so-called "TD" has the CHAIN-BIT set.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested by: glebius @
o Assign sc->an_dev in an_probe() (which isn't really a probe function in
the standard newbus sense) as we may need it for printing errors.
o Use device_printf() rather than if_printf() in an_reset() - this is
called from an_probe() long before the ifp structure is initialised
in an_attach().
o Initialize the ifp structure early in an_attach() as we use if_printf()
in cases where allocation of descriptors etc fails.
MFC after: 3 days
them up as part of firmware initialization (which the driver gets to do
only if it's the master driver).
Read the range of tids available for the ETHOFLD functionality if it's
enabled.
New is_ftid() and is_etid() functions to test whether a tid falls within
the range of filter tids or ETHOFLD tids respectively.
MFC after: 2 weeks
receiving Zero Length Packets, ZLPs. See comment in code for more
information.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Kohji Okuno <okuno.kohji@jp.panasonic.com>
sys/cdefs.h. In particular, in case of COMPAT_43, param.h includes
sys/types.h, which includes sys/select.h, which includes
sys/_sigset.h. The _sigset.h customizes the provided definions based
on COMPAT_43, eliminating osigset_t if symbol is not defined. The
sys/proc.h is included after opt_compat.h and needs osigset_t.
Move opt_compat.h inclusion into the right place.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
the bio is unmapped, so we must map the bio pages into pbuf. This
works around the geom classes which do not follow the MAXPHYS limit on
the i/o size, since such classes do not know about unmapped bios
either.
Reported by: Paolo Pinto <paolo.pinto@netasq.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
inclusion of right after sys/param.h.
o Only vt_core module use compat options, move it from common header to module.
Reported by: Larry Rosenman ler at lerctr dot org
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
o Include opt_splash.h for vt(9) to know when splash device is enabled.
o Build logo_freebsd.c only if splash and vt are enabled.
o Include opt_compat.h to know when we have to respect compatibility.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The code was unmodified compared to Linux and returned the amount of
received bytes from the i2c bus. This led to non-working i2c bus and
failure to eg. read monitor's EDID, if connected to DisplayPort.
MFC after: 3 days
Tested by: Mikaël Urankar <mikael.urankar@gmail.com>
This fixes radeon_agp_init() and gtt_size is now correct. However, this
is not enough to make Radeon AGP cards work: ttm_agp_backend.c isn't
implemented yet.
Submitted by: tijl@
Make the scan state optional - we'll obviously need a vap, but we now
won't require the scan state. the only thing the scan state is needed
for is to check for the list of SSIDs to scan - which we can now
just plain ignore by passing in NULL as the scan state pointer.
Tested:
* Intel 5100 (STA)
This is in preparation for being able to use iwn_scan() to do an off
channel scan to reset the RF tuning.
It should be a no-op.
Tested:
* Intel 5100 (STA)
in preparation for the scan based retune logic.
The linux iwlwifi driver does a rescan (onto a non-active channel)
to force an RF retune when the PLCP error rates exceed a certain threshold.
* Add code to track HT PLCP rate errors;
* Separate out the PLCP error count fetch and update so the delta
can be used when checking for PLCP error rates;
* Implement the PLCP error logic from iwlwifi;
* For now, just print out whenever the error rate exceeds the
threshold.
The actual scan based retune will take a bit more effort; the scan
command code right now assumes that a scan state is passed in.
This does need to change to be more flexible (both for this and
in preparation for scanning multiple channels at once.)
Tested:
* 5100 (STA mode)
* 2200 (STA mode)
* 2230 (STA mode)
working on some RF tuning issues.
The linux iwlwifi driver has these thresholds which they use to see
if there are PLCP errors over a certain interval. If they hit this,
they trigger a single-channel (different from active channels!)
scan to retune the RF front-end.