Commit Graph

332 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Adrian Chadd
49ddabc4bd CABQ calculation changes to try and fix some weird corner cases leading
to stuck beacons.

* Set the cabq readytime (ie, how long to burst for) to 50% of the total
  beacon interval time
* fix the cabq adjustment calculation based on how the beacon offset is
  calculated (the SWBA/DBA time offset.)

This is all still a bit magic voodoo but it does seem to have further
quietened issues with missed/stuck beacons under my local testing.
In any case, it better matches what the reference HAL implements.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2013-03-23 23:51:11 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
ba8d066231 Add another register definition bit - whether to populate EVM or PLCP
data in the RX status descriptor.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2013-03-10 09:43:01 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
bdb9fa5c87 add a method to set/clear the VMF field in the TX descriptor.
Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2013-03-04 07:40:49 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
6322256b83 Part #2 of the TX chainmask changes:
* Remove ar5416UpdateChainmasks();
* Remove the TX chainmask override code from the ar5416 TX descriptor
  setup routines;
* Write a driver method to calculate the current chainmask based on the
  operating mode and update the driver state;
* Call the HAL chainmask method before calling ath_hal_reset();
* Use the currently configured chainmask in the TX descriptors rather than
  the hardware TX chainmasks.

Tested:

* AR5416, STA/AP mode - legacy and 11n modes
2013-02-25 22:45:02 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
d2a72d673f Begin adding support to explicitly set the current chainmask.
Right now the only way to set the chainmask is to set the hardware
configured chainmask through capabilities.  This is fine for forcing
the chainmask to be something other than what the hardware is capable
of (eg to reduce TX/RX to one connected antenna) but it does change what
the HAL hardware chainmask configuration is.

For operational mode changes, it (may?) make sense to separately control
the TX/RX chainmask.

Right now it's done as part of ar5416_reset.c - ar5416UpdateChainMasks()
calculates which TX/RX chainmasks to enable based on the operating mode.
(1 for legacy and whatever is supported for 11n operation.)  But doing
this in the HAL is suboptimal - the driver needs to know the currently
configured chainmask in order to correctly enable things for each
TX descriptor.  This is currently done by overriding the chainmask
config in the ar5416 TX routines but this has to disappear - the AR9300
HAL support requires the driver to dynamically set the TX chainmask based
on the TX power and TX rate in order to meet mini-PCIe slot power
requirements.

So:

* Introduce a new HAL method to set the operational chainmask variables;
* Introduce null methods for the previous generation chipsets;
* Add new driver state to record the current chainmask separate from
  the hardware configured chainmask.

Part #2 of this will involve disabling ar5416UpdateChainMasks() and moving
it into the driver; as well as properly programming the TX chainmask
based on the currently configured HAL chainmask.

Tested:

* AR5416, STA mode - both legacy (11a/11bg) and 11n rates - verified
  that AR_SELFGEN_MASK (the chainmask used for self-generated frames like
  ACKs and RTSes) is correct, as well as the TX descriptor contents is
  correct.
2013-02-25 22:42:43 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
ffdc8f48dd Add a workaround for AR5416, AR9130 and AR9160 chipsets - work around
an incorrectly calculated RTS duration value when transmitting aggregates.

These earlier 802.11n NICs incorrectly used the ACK duration time when
calculating what to put in the RTS of an aggregate frame.  Instead it
should have used the block-ack time.  The result is that other stations
may not reserve enough time and start transmitting _over_ the top of
the in-progress blockack field.  Tsk.

This workaround is to popuate the burst duration field with the delta
between the ACK duration the hardware is using and the required duration
for the block-ack.  The result is that the RTS field should now contain
the correct duration for the subsequent block-ack.

This doesn't apply for AR9280 and later NICs.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2013-02-22 07:07:11 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
de2d9111ec Be slightly more paranoid with the TX DMA buffer maximum threshold.
Specifically - never jack the TX FIFO threshold up to the absolute
maximum; always leave enough space for two DMA transactions to
appear.

This is a paranoia from the Linux ath9k driver.  It can't hurt.

Obtained from:	Linux ath9k
2013-02-21 08:42:40 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
054eace83f Remove this unneeded printf(), sorry! 2013-02-21 02:52:13 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
d7cc11edce Configure larger TX FIFO default and maximum level values.
This has reduced the number of TX delimiter and data underruns when
doing large UDP transfers (>100mbit).

This stops any HAL_INT_TXURN interrupts from occuring, which is a good
sign!

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2013-02-20 12:14:49 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
71d6fe723e If any of the TX queues have underrun reporting enabled, enable
HAL_INT_TXURN in the interrupt mask register.

This should now allow for TXURN interrupts to be posted.
2013-02-20 11:24:11 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
650da23095 The encryption type field needs to be preserved for each descriptor
making up a frame, in both a sub-frame and for all frames in an
aggregate.

Tested:

* AR5416, STA mode
2013-02-09 02:42:01 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
bcd2a42f0b Fix the short repeat option code to not flip the option to 0 when
we call this w/ NOVAL set.
2013-01-02 03:56:20 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
973d40776c Bring over the basic spectral scan framework code from Qualcomm Atheros.
This includes the HAL routines to setup, enable/activate/disable spectral
scan and configure the relevant registers.

This still requires driver interaction to enable spectral scan reporting.
Specifically:

* call ah_spectralConfigure() to configure and enable spectral scan;
* .. there's currently no way to disable spectral scan... that will have
  to follow.
* call ah_spectralStart() to force start a spectral report;
* call ah_spectralStop() to force stop an active spectral report.

The spectral scan results appear as PHY errors (type 0x5 on the AR9280,
same as radar) but with the spectral scan bit set (0x10 in the last byte
of the frame) identifying it as a spectral report rather than a radar
FFT report.

Caveats:

* It's likely quite difficult to run spectral _and_ radar at the same
  time.  Enabling spectral scan disables the radar thresholds but
  leaves radar enabled.  Thus, the driver (for now) needs to ensure
  that only one or the other is enabled.

* .. it needs testing on HT40 mode.

Tested:

* AR9280 in STA mode, HT/20 only

TODO:

* Test on AR9285, AR9287;
* Test in both HT20 and HT40 modes;
* .. all the driver glue.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2013-01-02 00:38:01 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
2720a0cbd9 Add the AR9280 and later spectral scan register definitions.
Obtained from:	Linux ath9k, Qualcomm Atheros (datasheet)
2012-12-28 08:00:31 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
00ba39c988 Add radar_bin_thresh_sel (bit 24:26), which defines when
to consider the radar FFT report bins as "strong".
2012-12-28 07:49:45 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
a5e67727fb Note why fast frames is disabled for 802.11n NICs now.
It actually works, but net80211 handles A-MPDU and Fast frames
incorrectly; it tries enabling both in some instances, with tragic
results.
2012-12-21 04:28:05 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
e89812c379 Methodise the BT diversity configuration function; so the AR9285
can correctly override it.

This was missed in the previous commit.
2012-12-04 00:02:46 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
24a8406b99 Add and tie in the AR5416 bluetooth coexistence methods into the HAL. 2012-12-03 23:45:06 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
e5d63a99bc Add a new HAL capability - check and enforce whether the NIC supports
enforcing the TXOP and TBTT limits:

* Frames which will overlap with TBTT will not TX;
* Frames which will exceed TXOP will be filtered.

This is not enabled by default; it's intended to be enabled by the
TDMA code on 802.11n capable chipsets.
2012-12-01 03:48:11 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
6dd853a77a Add a comment which covers what's going on with the 64 bit TSF write.
After chatting with the MAC team, the TSF writes (at least on the 11n
MACs, I don't know about pre-11n MACs) are done as 64 bit writes that
can take some time.  So, doing a 32 bit TSF write is definitely not
supported.  Leave a comment here which explains that.

Whilst here, add a comment which outlines that after a reset or TSF
write, the TSF write may take a while (up to 50uS) to update.
A write or reset shouldn't be done whilst the previous one is in
flight.  Also (and this isn't currently done) a read shouldn't
occur until the SLEEP32_TSF_WRITE_STAT is clear.  Right now we're
not doing that, mostly because we haven't been doing lots of TSF
resets/writes until recently.
2012-11-24 02:41:18 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
c83ba0b9bf Implement a HAL method to set a 64 bit TSF value.
TODO: implement it (and test) for the AR5210/AR5211.
2012-11-23 05:32:24 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
69f33b13d1 I'm not sure why ah_desc.h was required here, but it doesn't _need_
to be. So, just toss it.

There's no options or ah_desc fields in here.

Whilst I'm here, fix up the #ifdef and #define to mach.
2012-11-16 20:04:45 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
f74b406ddd HAL API changes!
* introduce a new HAL API method to pull out the TX status descriptor
  contents.

* Add num_delims to the 11n first aggr method.  This isn't used by the
  driver at the moment so it won't affect anything.
2012-11-03 04:55:43 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
b0245b90ba Oops - this was incorrectly removed in a previous commit. 2012-10-31 21:06:55 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
adadb6074d HAL updates!
* Add some more ANI spur immunity levels.
* For AR5111 radios attached to an AR5212, limit the 5GHz channels
  that are available. A later revision of the AR5111 supports the 4.9GHz
  PSB channels but right now there's no check in place for the radio
  revision.

  If someone wants PSB support on AR5212+AR5111 radios then please let
  me know and I'll add the relevant version check.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2012-10-31 21:03:55 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
e9472a9f88 Implement the quarter rate fractional channel programming for the
AR5416 and AR9280, but leave it disabled by default.

TL;DR: don't enable this code at all unless you go through the process
of getting the NIC re-certified.  This is purely to be used as a
reference and NOT a certified solution by any stretch of the imagination.

The background:

The AR5112 RF synth right up to the AR5133 RF synth (used on the AR5416,
derivative is used for the AR9130/AR9160) only implement down to 2.5MHz
channel spacing in 5GHz.  Ie, the RF synth is programmed in steps of 2.5MHz
(or 5, 10, 20MHz.) So they can't represent the quarter rate channels
in the 4.9GHz PSB (which end in xxx2MHz and xxx7MHz).  They support
fractional spacing in 2GHz (1MHz spacing) (or things wouldn't work,
right?)

So instead of doing this, the RF synth programming for the AR5112 and
later code will round to the nearest available frequency.

If all NICs were RF5112 or later, they'll inter-operate fine - they all
program the same. (And for reference, only the latest revision of the
RF5111 NICs do it, but the driver doesn't yet implement the programming.)

However:

* The AR5416 programming didn't at all implement the fractional synth
  work around as above;
* The AR9280 programming actually programmed the accurate centre frequency
  and thus wouldn't inter-operate with the legacy NICs.

So this patch:

* Implements the 4.9GHz PSB fractional synth workaround, exactly as the
  RF5112 and later code does;
* Adds a very dirty workaround from me to calculate the same channel
  centre "fudge" to the AR9280 code when operating on fractional frequencies
  in 5GHz.

HOWEVER however:

It is disabled by default.  Since the HAL didn't implement this feature,
it's highly unlikely that the AR5416 and AR928x has been tested in these
centre frequencies.  There's a lot of regulatory compliance testing required
before a NIC can have this enabled - checking for centre frequency,
for drift, for synth spurs, for distortion and spectral mask compliance.
There's likely a lot of other things that need testing so please don't
treat this as an exhaustive, authoritative list.  There's a perfectly good
process out there to get a NIC certified by your regulatory domain, please
go and engage someone to do that for you and pay the relevant fees.

If a company wishes to grab this work and certify existing 802.11n NICs
for work in these bands then please be my guest.  The AR9280 works fine
on the correct fractional synth channels (49x2 and 49x7Mhz) so you don't
need to get certification for that. But the 500KHz offset hack may have
the above issues (spur, distortion, accuracy, etc) so you will need to
get the NIC recertified.

Please note that it's also CARD dependent.  Just because the RF synth
will behave correctly doesn't at all mean that the card design will also
behave correctly.  So no, I won't enable this by default if someone
verifies a specific AR5416/AR9280 NIC works.  Please don't ask.

Tested:

I used the following NICs to do basic interoperability testing at
half and quarter rates.  However, I only did very minimal spectrum
analyser testing (mostly "am I about to blow things up" testing;
not "certification ready" testing):

* AR5212 + AR5112 synth
* AR5413 + AR5413 synth
* AR5416 + AR5113 synth
* AR9280
2012-10-04 15:42:45 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
08977788d5 Track the last ANI TX/RX sample correctly.
This doesn't specifically fix the issue(s) i'm seeing in this 2GHz
environment (where setting/increasing spur immunity causes OFDM restart
errors to skyrocket through the roof; but leaving it at 0 would leave
the environment cleaner..)

Pointy-hat-to:	me, for committing this broken code in the first place.
2012-09-27 06:05:54 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
9b967f5d12 Don't use AR_PHY_MODE to setup half/quarter rate.
I'm not sure where in the deep, distant past I found the AR_PHY_MODE
registers for half/quarter rate mode, but unfortunately that doesn't
seem to work "right" for non-AR9280 chips.

Specifically:

* don't touch AR_PHY_MODE
* set the PLL bits when configuring half/quarter rate

I've verified this on the AR9280 (5ghz fast clock) and the AR5416.

The AR9280 works in both half/quarter rate; the AR5416 unfortunately
only currently works at half rate.  It fails to calibrate on quarter rate.
2012-09-13 18:24:13 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
77ffc4c1fc Flip on half/quarter rate support.
No, this isn't HT/5 and HT/10 support.  This is the 11a half/quarter
rate support primarily used by the 4.9GHz and GSM band regulatory
domains.

This is definitely a work in progress.

TODO:

* everything in the last commit;
* lots more interoperability testing with the AR5212 half/quarter rate
  support for the relevant chips;
* Do some interop testing on half/quarter rate support between _all_
  the 11n chips - AR5416, AR9160, AR9280 (and AR9285/AR9287 when 2GHz
  half/quarter rate support is coded up.)
2012-09-13 07:24:14 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
ce801478d2 Introduce an AR5416 flavour of the IFS and mac usec/timing configuration
used when running the chips in half/quarter rate.

This sets up some default parameters which are then overridden by the
driver (which manually configures things like slot timing at interface
start time.)

Although this is a copy-and-modify from the AR5212 HAL, I did peek
at the reference HAL and the ath9k driver to see what they did.
Ath9k in particular doesn't hard-code this - instead, their version
of ar5416InitUserSettings() does all of the relevant math.

TODO:

* do the math, not hard code things!
* fix the mac clock calculation for the AR9287; since it runs the
  MAC clock at a higher rate, requiring all the duration calculations
  to change;
* Do a whole lot more validation for half/quarter rates.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros, Linux ath9k
2012-09-13 07:22:40 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
41b53a9aaf Call the ar5212SetCoverageClass() function for now.
Some of the math is a little wrong thanks to clocks in 11a mode running
at 44MHz when in fast clock mode (rather than 40MHz, which the chips
before AR9280 ran 11a in).  That'll have to be addressed in a future commit.
2012-09-13 07:19:53 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
c19a7918f3 Add register defintions for the AR5416 TX/RX latency fields.
Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2012-09-13 07:17:58 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
5b0c1ea0c9 Ensure that all firstep values are available in ANI.
The comparison assumes maxFirstepLevel is a count, rather than a maximum
value.  The array is 3 entries in size however 'maxFirstepLevel' is 2.

This bug also exists in the AR5212 HAL.
2012-08-27 20:10:38 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
810f2a9cbc Fix the debugging output to correctly log CCK errors. 2012-08-27 20:03:08 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
217ad7d2a5 Add default values for the NumTxMaps capability. 2012-08-24 07:35:18 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
54798be082 Implement an API to fetch the default DFS parameters for the given chip.
The only chip this is currently implemented for is the AR5416 HAL family.
A follow-up commit will add AR5212 support.

PR:		kern/170904
2012-08-24 01:29:46 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
fffbec8618 Migrate the 802.11n ath_hal_chaintxdesc() API to use a buffer/segment
array, similar to what filltxdesc() uses.

This removes the last reference to ds_data in the TX path outside of
debugging statements.  These need to be adjusted/fixed.

Tested:

* AR9280 STA/AP with iperf TCP traffic
2012-08-05 11:24:21 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
46634305f4 Migrate the ath_hal_filltxdesc() API to take a list of buffer/seglen values.
The existing API only exposes 'seglen' (the current buffer (segment) length)
with the data buffer pointer set in 'ds_data'.  This is fine for the legacy
DMA engine but it won't work for the EDMA engines.

The EDMA engine has a significantly different TX descriptor layout.

* The legacy DMA engine had a ds_data pointer at the same offset in the
  descriptor for both TX and RX buffers;
* The EDMA engine has no ds_data for RX - the data is DMAed after the
  descriptor;
* The EDMA engine has support for 4 TX buffer/segment pairs in the TX
  DMA descriptor;
* The EDMA TX completion is in a different FIFO, and the driver will
  'link' the status completion entry to a QCU by a "QCU ID".
  I don't know why it's just not filled in by the hardware, alas.

So given that, here are the changes:

* Instead of directly fondling 'ds_data' in ath_desc, change the
  ath_hal_filltxdesc() to take an array of buffer pointers as well
  as segment len pointers;
* The EDMA TX completion status wants a descriptor and queue id.
  This (for now) uses bf_state.bfs_txq and will extract the hardware QCU
  ID from that.
* .. and this is ugly and wasteful; it should change to just store
  the QCU in the bf_state and save 3/7 bytes in the process.

Now, the weird crap:

* The aggregate TX path was using bf_state->bfs_txq for the TXQ, rather than
  taking a function argument.  I've tidied that up.
* The multicast queue frames get put on a software TXQ and then that is
  appended to the hardware CABQ when appropriate.  So for now, make sure
  that bf_state->bfs_txq points at the CABQ when adding frames to the
  multicast queue.
* .. but the multicast queue TX path for now doesn't use the software
  queue and instead
  (a) directly sets up the descriptor contents at that point;
  (b) the frames on the vap->avp_mcastq are then just appended wholesale
      to the CABQ.
  So for now, I don't have to worry about making the multicast path
  work with aggregation or the per-TID software queue. Phew.

What's left to do:

* I need to modify the 11n ath_hal_chaintxdesc() API to do the same.
  I'll do that in a subsequent commit.
* Remove bf_state.bfs_txq entirely and store the QCU as appropriate.
* .. then do the runtime "is this going on the right HWQ?" checks using
  that, rather than comparing pointer values.

Tested on:

* AR9280 STA/AP
* AR5416 STA/AP
2012-08-05 10:12:27 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
ee3e4df90c Flesh out the multi-rate retry capability.
The existing method for testing for MRR is to call the "SetupXTXDesc"
HAL method and see if it returns AH_TRUE or AH_FALSE.  This capability
explicitly lists what number of multi-rate attempts are possible.

"1" means "one rate attempt supported".
2012-07-28 07:28:08 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
ea75088478 Add STBC TX support for AR5416 HAL chips.
Specifically, however:

* AR9280 and later support 1-stream STBC RX;
* AR9280 and AR9287 support 1-stream STBC TX.

The STBC support isn't announced (yet) via net80211 and it isn't at all
chosen by the rate control code, so there's no real consumer of this
yet.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2012-07-27 11:54:05 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
26463136ac Bring this API in line with what the reference driver and Linux ath9k
was doing.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros, Linux ath9k
2012-07-27 11:23:24 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
df91468216 Migrate the MAC/BB hang structures out from ar5416_misc.h into the HAL.
The ar9300 HAL also uses these types, so it makes no sense to duplicate
them.
2012-07-01 03:15:18 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
df5ea0d85b Fix a subtle corner case surrounding the handling of OFDM restart along
with AMPDU aggregate delimiters.

If there's an OFDM restart during an aggregate, the hardware ACKs
the previous frame, but communicates the RXed frame to the hardware
as having had CRC delimiter error + OFDM_RESTART phy error.
The frame however didn't have a CRC error and since the hardware ACKed
the aggregate to the sender, it thinks the frame was received.

Since I have no idea how often this occurs in the real world, add a
debug statement so trigger whenever this occurs.  I'd appreciate an
email if someone finds this particular situation is triggered.
2012-06-27 05:23:33 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
a6f801b608 Remove duplicate entries. 2012-06-27 03:00:29 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
6479ef780d Bring over the initial 802.11n bluetooth coexistence support code.
The Linux ath9k btcoex code is based off of this code.

Note this doesn't actually implement functional btcoex; there's some
driver glue and a whole lot of verification that is required.

On the other hand, I do have the AR9285+BT and AR9287+BT NICs which
this code supports..

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros, Linux ath9k
2012-06-26 22:16:53 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
a183985e6f On second thought, let's just set both CRC and PHY errors together on
frames that have it and let the upper layer sort it out.

PR:		kern/169362
2012-06-24 06:37:28 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
efb44bb8ca Sometimes the AR5416 sends back radar PHY errors with both the PHY error
and the CRC error bits set.  The radar payload is correct.

When this happens, the stack doesn't see them PHY error frames and
isn't interpreted as a PHY error.  So, no radar detection and no radiotap
PHY error handling.

Now, this may introduce some weird issues if the MAC sends up some other
combination of CRC error + PHY error frames; this commit would break that
and mark them as PHY errors instead of CRC errors.

I may tinker with this a little more to pass radar/early radar/spectral
frames up as PHY errors if the CRC bit is set, to restore the previous
behaviour (where if CRC is set on a PHY error frame, it's marked as a CRC
error rather than PHY error.)

Tested on:	AR5416, over the air, to a USRP N200 which is generating a
		large number of a variety of radar pulses.
TODO:		Test on AR9130, AR9160, AR9280 (and maybe radar pulses on
		2GHz on AR9285/AR9287.)

PR:		kern/169362
2012-06-24 05:59:32 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
cf2a77f961 Add some AR5416/AR5418 WAR's for power-on and suspend/resume:
* Now that ah_configPCIE is called for both power on and suspend/resume,
  make sure the right bit(s) are cleared and set when suspending and
  resuming.  Specifically:

  + force disable/enable the PCIe PHY upon suspend/resume;
  + reprogram the PCIe WAR register when resuming and upon power-on.

* Add a recipe which powers down any PCIe PHY hardware inside the AR5416
  (which is the PCI variant) to save on power.  I have (currently) no way
  to test exactly how much power is saved, if any.

Tested on:

* AR5416 cardbus - although unfortunately pccard/cbb/cardbus currently
  detaches the NIC upon suspend, I don't think it's a proper test case.

* AR5418 PCIe attached to expresscard - since we're not doing PCIe APSM,
  it's also not likely a full/good test case.

In both instances I went through a handful of suspend/resume cycles and
ensured that the STA vap reassociated correctly.

TODO:

* Setup a laptop to simply sit in a suspend/resume loop, making sure that
  the NIC always correctly comes back;

* Start doing suspend/resume tests with actual traffic going on in the
  background, as I bet this process is all quite racy at the present;

* Test adhoc/hostap mode, just to be completely sure it's working correctly;

* See if I can jury rig an external power source to an AR5416 to test out
  whether ah_disablePCIE() works.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2012-05-25 17:53:57 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
5a8ffc7d5c * According to the reference code, AR_WA_D3_L1_DISBABLE is bit 14.
* Add some other WAR bits (very usefully described too) in preparation for
  porting over some suspend/resume fixes from ath9k/Atheros.

Obtained from:	Qualcomm Atheros
2012-05-25 16:45:56 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
ae2a0aa428 oops - ath_hal_disablepcie is actually destined for another purpose,
not to disable the PCIe PHY in prepration for reset.

Extend the enablepci method to have a "poweroff" flag, which if equal
to true means the hardware is about to go to sleep.
2012-05-25 05:01:27 +00:00