In particular, don't check the value of the bus_dma map against NULL
to determine if either bus_dmamem_alloc() or bus_dmamap_load() succeeded.
Instead, assume that bus_dmamap_load() succeeeded (and thus that
bus_dmamap_unload() should be called) if the bus address for a resource
is non-zero, and assume that bus_dmamem_alloc() succeeded (and thus
that bus_dmamem_free() should be called) if the virtual address for a
resource is not NULL.
In many cases these bugs could result in leaks when a driver was detached.
Reviewed by: yongari
MFC after: 2 weeks
to this event, adding if_var.h to files that do need it. Also, include
all includes that now are included due to implicit pollution via if_var.h
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
one. Interestingly, these are actually the default for quite some time
(bus_generic_driver_added(9) since r52045 and bus_generic_print_child(9)
since r52045) but even recently added device drivers do this unnecessarily.
Discussed with: jhb, marcel
- While at it, use DEVMETHOD_END.
Discussed with: jhb
- Also while at it, use __FBSDID.
Pause timer value is initialized to 0xFFFF. Controller allows just
4 different TX pause thresholds. The lowest possible threshold
value looks too aggressive so use next available threshold value.
- Remove MIIBUS statchg callback and program VGE_DIAGCTL before
initiating link establishment. Previously driver used to
program VGE_DIAGCTL after getting a link in statchg callback.
It seems the VGE_DIAGCTL register works like a kind of MII
register such that it requires setting a 'to be' mode in advance
rather than relying on resolved speed/duplex of established link.
This means the statchg callback is not needed in driver. In
addition, if there was no link at the time of media change, this
was not called at all.
- Introduce vge_ifmedia_upd_locked() to change current media to
configured one. Actual media change is performed only after PHY
reset and VGE_DIAGCTL setup.
- In WOL configuration, make sure to clear forced mode such that
controller can rely on auto-negotiation.
- Unlike most other drivers that use miibus(4), vge(4) used
controller's auto-polling feature for link state tracking via
interrupt. This came from controller's inefficient mechanism to
access MII registers. On link state change interrupt, vge(4)
used to get current link state with series of MII register
accesses. Because vge(4) already enabled auto polling, read PHY
status register to resolved speed/duplex/flow control parameters.
vge(4) still does not drive MII_TICK to reduce number of MII
register accesses which in turn means the driver does not know the
status of auto-negotiation. This was a one of long standing
issue of vge(4). Probably driver may be able to implement a timer
that keeps track of auto-negotiation state and restart
auto-negotiation when driver couldn't establish a link within a
specified period. However the controller does not provide a
reliable way to detect auto-negotiation failure so I'm not sure
whether it's worth to implement it in driver.
Alternatively driver can completely disable MII auto-polling and
let miibus(4) poll link state by driving MII_TICK. This may reduce
unnecessary overhead of stopping/restarting MII auto-polling of
controller. Unfortunately it was known that some variants of
controller does not work correctly if MII auto-polling is disabled.
Because driver is accessing a common MII structure in
mii_pollstat(), updating user supplied structure should be done
before dropping a driver lock.
Reported by: Karim (fodillemlinkarimi <> gmail dot com)
whenever the link state is changed. Using software based polling
for media status tracking is known to cause MII access failure
under certain conditions once link is established so vge(4) used to
rely on link status change interrupt.
However DEVICE_POLLING completely disables generation of all kind
of interrupts on vge(4) such that this resulted in not detecting
link state change event. This means vge(4) does not correctly
detect established/lost link with DEVICE_POLLING. Losing the
interrupt made vge(4) not to send any packets to peer since vge(4)
does not try to send any packets when there is no established link.
Work around the issue by generating link state change interrupt
with DEVICE_POLLING.
PR: kern/160442
Approved by: re (kib)
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
the NIC drivers as well as the PHY drivers to take advantage of the
mii_attach() introduced in r213878 to get rid of certain hacks. For
the most part these were:
- Artificially limiting miibus_{read,write}reg methods to certain PHY
addresses; we now let mii_attach() only probe the PHY at the desired
address(es) instead.
- PHY drivers setting MIIF_* flags based on the NIC driver they hang
off from, partly even based on grabbing and using the softc of the
parent; we now pass these flags down from the NIC to the PHY drivers
via mii_attach(). This got us rid of all such hacks except those of
brgphy() in combination with bce(4) and bge(4), which is way beyond
what can be expressed with simple flags.
While at it, I took the opportunity to change the NIC drivers to pass
up the error returned by mii_attach() (previously by mii_phy_probe())
and unify the error message used in this case where and as appropriate
as mii_attach() actually can fail for a number of reasons, not just
because of no PHY(s) being present at the expected address(es).
Reviewed by: jhb, yongari
Quite contrary to VT6130 datasheet which says it supports up to 8K
jumbo frame, VT6130 does not seem to send jumbo frame that is
larger than 4K in length. Trying to send a frame that is larger
than 4K cause TX MAC hang.
Even though it's possible to allow 4K jumbo frame for VT6130, I
think it's meaningless to allow 4K jumbo frame. I'm not sure VT6132
also has the same limitation but I guess it uses the same MAC of
VT6130.
controllers. TX/RX interrupt mitigation is controlled by
VGE_TXSUPPTHR and VGE_RXSUPPTHR register. These registers suppress
generation of interrupts until the programmed frames counter equals
to the registers. VT61xx also supports interrupt hold off timer
register. If this interrupt hold off timer is active all interrupts
would be disabled until the timer reaches to 0. The timer value is
reloaded whenever VGE_ISR register written. The timer resolution is
about 20us.
Previously vge(4) used single shot timer to reduce Tx completion
interrupts. This required VGE_CRS1 register access in Tx
start/completion handler to rearm new timeout value and it did not
show satisfactory result(more than 50k interrupts under load). Rx
interrupts was not moderated at all such that vge(4) used to
generate too many interrupts which in turn made polling(4) better
approach under high network load.
This change activates all interrupt moderation mechanism and
initial values were tuned to generate interrupt less than 8k per
second. That number of interrupts wouldn't add additional packet
latencies compared to polling(4). These interrupt parameters could
be changed with sysctl.
dev.vge.%d.int_holdoff
dev.vge.%d.rx_coal_pkt
dev.vge.%d.tx_coal_pkt
Interface has be brought down and up again before change take
effect.
With interrupt moderation there is no more need to loop in
interrupt handler. This loop always added one more register access.
While I'm here remove dead code which tried to implement subset of
interrupt moderation.
ethernet controller was recognized. VIA consistently calls
"Velocity" family for gigabit ethernet controllers. For fast
ethernet controllers they uses "Rhine" family(vr(4) controllers))
and vr(4) already shows "Rhine" in probe message.
tagged frames so add checksum offloading capabilities. Also add
missing VLAN hardware tagging control in ioctl handler and let
upper stack know current VLAN capabilities.
after ether_ifattach(), as ether_ifattach() initializes it with
ETHER_HDR_LEN.
While I'm here remove setting if_mtu, it's already handled in
ether_ifattach().
called and vge(4) used to drive auto-negotiation timer(mii_tick) in
vge_tick(). Therefore the mii_tick was not called for every hz such
that auto-negotiation complete was never handled in vge(4).
Use mii_pollstat to extract current negotiated speed/duplex instead
of mii_tick. The latter is valid only for auto-negotiation case.
While I'm here change the confusing function name vge_tick() to
vge_link_statchg().
is called in vge_init_lock(), vge(4) always used to reload EEPROM.
Also add more comment why vge(4) clears VGE_CHIPCFG0_PACPI bit.
While I'm here add missing new line in vge_reset().
controllers(VT613x), we assume the PHY address is 1.
Use the saved PHY address in MII register access routines and
remove accessing VGE_MIICFG register.
While I'm here save PCI express capability register which will be
used in near future.
record device specific bits. Remove vge_link and use vge_flags.
While here, move clearing link state before mii_mediachg() as
mii_mediachg() may affect link state.
seems to work like a tag that indicates 'not list end' of queued
frames. Without having a VGE_TXDESC_Q bit indicates 'list end'. So
the last frame of multiple queued frames has no VGE_TXDESC_Q bit.
The hardware has peculiar behavior for VGE_TXDESC_Q bit handling.
If the VGE_TXDESC_Q bit of descriptor was set the controller would
fetch next descriptor. However if next descriptor's OWN bit was
cleared but VGE_TXDESC_Q was set, it could confuse controller.
Clearing VGE_TXDESC_Q bit for transmitted frames ensure correct
behavior.
o Separate TX/RX buffer DMA tag from TX/RX descriptor ring DMA tag.
o Separate RX buffer DMA tag from common buffer DMA tag. RX DMA
tag has different restriction compared to TX DMA tag.
o Add 40bit DMA address support.
o Adjust TX/RX descriptor ring alignment to 64 bytes from 256
bytes as documented in datasheet.
o Added check to ensure TX/RX ring reside within a 4GB boundary.
Since TX/RX ring shares the same high address register they
should have the same high address.
o TX/RX side bus_dmamap_load_mbuf_sg(9) support.
o Add lock assertion to vge_setmulti().
o Add RX spare DMA map to recover from DMA map load failure.
o Add optimized RX buffer handler, vge_discard_rxbuf which is
activated when vge(4) sees bad frames.
o Don't blindly update VGE_RXDESC_RESIDUECNT register. Datasheet
says the register should be updated only when number of
available RX descriptors are multiple of 4.
o Use __NO_STRICT_ALIGNMENT instead of defining VGE_FIXUP_RX which
is only set for i386 architecture. Previously vge(4) also
performed expensive copy operation to align IP header on amd64.
This change should give RX performance boost on amd64
architecture.
o Don't reinitialize controller if driver is already running. This
should reduce number of link state flipping.
o Since vge(4) drops a driver lock before passing received frame
to upper layer, make sure vge(4) is still running after
re-acquiring driver lock.
o Add second argument count to vge_rxeof(). The argument will
limit number of packets could be processed in RX handler.
o Rearrange vge_rxeof() not to allocate RX buffer if received
frame was bad packet.
o Removed if_printf that prints DMA map failure. This type of
message shouldn't be used in fast path of driver.
o Reduce number of allowed TX buffer fragments to 6 from 7. A TX
descriptor allows 7 fragments of a frame. However the CMZ field
of descriptor has just 3bits and the controller wants to see
fragment + 1 in the field. So if we have 7 fragments the field
value would be 0 which seems to cause unexpected results under
certain conditions. This change should fix occasional TX hang
observed on vge(4).
o Simplify vge_stat_locked() and add number of available TX
descriptor check.
o vge(4) controllers lack padding short frames. Make sure to fill
zero for the padded bytes. This closes unintended information
disclosure.
o Don't set VGE_TDCTL_JUMBO flag. Datasheet is not clear whether
this bit should be set by driver or write-back status bit after
transmission. At least vendor's driver does not set this bit so
remove it. Without this bit vge(4) still can send jumbo frames.
o Don't start driver when vge(4) know there are not enough RX
buffers.
o Remove volatile keyword in RX descriptor structure. This should
be handled by bus_dma(9).
o Collapse two 16bits member of TX/RX descriptor into single 32bits
member.
o Reduce number of RX descriptors to 252 from 256. The
VGE_RXDESCNUM is 16bits register but only lower 8bits are valid.
So the maximum number of RX descriptors would be 255. However
the number of should be multiple of 4 as controller wants to
update 4 RX descriptors at a time. This limits the maximum
number of RX descriptor to be 252.
Tested by: Dewayne Geraghty (dewayne.geraghty <> heuristicsystems dot com dot au)
Carey Jones (m.carey.jones <> gmail dot com)
Yoshiaki Kasahara (kasahara <> nc dor kyushu-u dot ac dotjp)
was made in r199543 to remove MTX_RECURSE. These routines can be
called in device attach phase(e.g. mii_phy_probe()) so checking
assertion here is not right as caller does not hold a driver lock.
- Overhaul the locking to avoid recursion and add missing locking in a few
places.
- Don't schedule a task to call vge_start() from contexts that are safe to
call vge_start() directly. Just invoke the routine directly instead
(this is what all of the other NIC drivers I am familiar with do). Note
that vge(4) does not use an interrupt filter handler which is the primary
reason some other drivers use tasks.
- Add a new private timer to drive the watchdog timer instead of using
if_watchdog and if_timer.
- Fixup detach by calling ether_ifdetach() before stopping the interface.