1998-09-15 08:23:17 +00:00
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HARP Notes
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1998-09-14
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This is a list of currently known incompatibilities and miscellaneous gotchas
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in HARP.
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To report new items, please send mail to harp-bugs@magic.net.
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================================================================================
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Efficient Driver and DMA sizes
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==============================
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The Efficient adapter moves PDUs between host memory and adapter memory with
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the help of DMA descriptor lists. Each DMA descriptor consists of two words.
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Word 0 contains a DMA type identifier and a repetition count. Word 1 contains
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the physical (not virtual) host buffer address. Each DMA type is really an
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encoding of the burst size for the DMA. (See /usr/src/sys/dev/hea/eni.h for
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more on the DMA types.) HARP was originally developed using burst sizes of
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8_WORD, 4_WORD, and 1_WORD sizes. Each DMA request would be built to first
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move as much data as possible using an 8_WORD burst. This should leave 0-7
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words left over. If there were more than 3 words remaining, a 4_WORD DMA burst
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would be scheduled. The remaining data must then be 0-3 words in length and
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would be moved with 1_WORD bursts. The use of large burst sizes makes more
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efficient use of DMA by performing the same amount of work in fewer cycles.
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Several users have reported problems with DMA which were characterized by error
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messages of the form:
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"eni_output: Transmit drain queue is full. Resources will be lost."
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or
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"eni_output: not enough room in DMA queue".
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It was determined that these systems do not support the use of four- or
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eight-word DMA bursts. To resolve this problem, HARP now #ifdef's around the
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8_WORD and 4_WORD DMA setup and #undef's both values by default. This results
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in the default operation of the Efficient driver to use only 1_WORD DMA bursts.
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If you wish to experiment with larger DMA bursts, you can edit the file
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/usr/src/sys/dev/hea/eni_transmit.c and change the #undef to a #define for
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DMA_USE_8WORD and/or DMA_USE_4WORD. You will need to rebuild and install your
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kernel for this change to take effect.
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We are exploring solutions which would allow HARP to determine which DMA bursts
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are supported by the system at run-time. This would allow the Efficient device
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driver to make use of larger, more efficient burst sizes where supported
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without halting on systems which can't support the larger sizes.
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1999-08-28 00:22:10 +00:00
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@(#) $FreeBSD$
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1998-09-15 08:23:17 +00:00
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