Use the same scheme implemented to manage credentials.
Code needing to look at process's credentials (as opposed to thred's) is
provided with *_proc variants of relevant functions.
Places which possibly had to take the proc lock anyway still use the proc
pointer to access limits.
gracefully fail if the /dev/megaraid_sas_ioctl_node symlink already exists.
This can happen if mfi(4) and mrsas(4) are both attached to cards and
providing Linux emulation support. Let the first one win. An equivalent
change needs to be done to mrsas(4). Extra credit would be to pass the
Linux emulation call to the other driver when appropriate. This will
probably be a rare case and the user can manually change where the symlink
points to.
MFC after: 3 days
(easily) without having to go to other drivers to change the
magical return values. This wouldn't be so bad if there were
proper defines for these constants.
In particular dev/acpica/acpi_pcib_pci.c returns -1000 as the
probe priority and it's expected that this driver gets to
attach over the common PCI bus drivers.
Without creating a LAW entry, any access to the NAND hangs the CPU.
The original intent was to add a quirk to map all of the RouterBoard's LBC
address space in one shot, which would fix it for both NAND and the CF, and
that's probably still in the cards. However, for now, this makes NAND usable
without a separate hack.
Things left before the RouterBoard can run standalone:
* Add partitions to the NAND (not specified by the FDT, which we currently
require).
* Create a YAFFS partition for the kernel. The Mikrotik boot loader requires a
4MB partition at the beginning of NAND, with a file called 'kernel' in the
root.
Create a special resource (= device special file) for management
of tags and maps, as well as for mapping memory into the address
space. DMA resources are managed using the PROTO_IOC_BUSDMA ioctl.
Part 1 implements tag creation, derivation and destruction.
BUS_PROBE_HOOVER is. Drivers like proto(4), when compiled into the
kernel or preloaded, will render your system useless by virtue of
attaching to your PCI busses.
Return BUS_PROBE_GENERIC instead. It's just the next priority up
from BUS_PROBE_HOOVER. No other meaning has been give to its use.
While BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT seems like a better candidate, it's hard
not to think that there must be some reason why these drivers
return -10000 in the first place.
Differential Revision: D2705
code update, with supporting changes in the CORE. Changes for the extended
media types, VF driver has virtual channel protocol changes, and some
register use corrections. This software change should be coordinated with
Firmware updates to your hardware, contact your support channels for that.
MFC after: 1 week
logic is now placed in the mmap hook implementation rather than requiring
it to be placed in sys/vm/vm_mmap.c. This hook allows new file types to
support mmap() as well as potentially allowing mmap() for existing file
types that do not currently support any mapping.
The vm_mmap() function is now split up into two functions. A new
vm_mmap_object() function handles the "back half" of vm_mmap() and accepts
a referenced VM object to map rather than a (handle, handle_type) tuple.
vm_mmap() is now reduced to converting a (handle, handle_type) tuple to a
a VM object and then calling vm_mmap_object() to handle the actual mapping.
The vm_mmap() function remains for use by other parts of the kernel
(e.g. device drivers and exec) but now only supports mapping vnodes,
character devices, and anonymous memory.
The mmap() system call invokes vm_mmap_object() directly with a NULL object
for anonymous mappings. For mappings using a file descriptor, the
descriptors fo_mmap() hook is invoked instead. The fo_mmap() hook is
responsible for performing type-specific checks and adjustments to
arguments as well as possibly modifying mapping parameters such as flags
or the object offset. The fo_mmap() hook routines then call
vm_mmap_object() to handle the actual mapping.
The fo_mmap() hook is optional. If it is not set, then fo_mmap() will
fail with ENODEV. A fo_mmap() hook is implemented for regular files,
character devices, and shared memory objects (created via shm_open()).
While here, consistently use the VM_PROT_* constants for the vm_prot_t
type for the 'prot' variable passed to vm_mmap() and vm_mmap_object()
as well as the vm_mmap_vnode() and vm_mmap_cdev() helper routines.
Previously some places were using the mmap()-specific PROT_* constants
instead. While this happens to work because PROT_xx == VM_PROT_xx,
using VM_PROT_* is more correct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2658
Reviewed by: alc (glanced over), kib
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio
stability.
I'll re-enable it once the scan overhaul is done - the NIC itself
can do bgscan, but not how we're doing it.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
up to 2 rx/tx queues for the 82574.
Program the 82574 to enable 5 msix vectors, assign 1 to each rx queue,
1 to each tx queue and 1 to the link handler.
Inspired by DragonFlyBSD, enable some RSS logic for handling tx queue
handling/processing.
Move multiqueue handler functions so that they line up better in a diff
review to if_igb.c
Always enqueue tx work to be done in em_mq_start, if unable to acquire
the TX lock, then this will be processed in the background later by the
taskqueue. Remove mbuf argument from em_start_mq_locked() as the work
is always enqueued. (stolen from igb)
Setup TARC, TXDCTL and RXDCTL registers for better performance and stability
in multiqueue and singlequeue implementations. Handle Intel errata 3 and
generic multiqueue behavior with the initialization of TARC(0) and TARC(1)
Bind interrupt threads to cpus in order. (stolen from igb)
Add 2 new DDB functions, one to display the queue(s) and their settings and
one to reset the adapter. Primarily used for debugging.
In the multiqueue configuration, bump RXD and TXD ring size to max for the
adapter (4096). Setup an RDTR of 64 and an RADV of 128 in multiqueue configuration
to cut down on the number of interrupts. RADV was arbitrarily set to 2x RDTR
and can be adjusted as needed.
Cleanup the display in top a bit to make it clearer where the taskqueue threads
are running and what they should be doing.
Ensure that both queues are processed by em_local_timer() by writing them both
to the IMS register to generate soft interrupts.
Ensure that an soft interrupt is generated when em_msix_link() is run so that
any races between assertion of the link/status interrupt and a rx/tx interrupt
are handled.
Document existing tuneables: hw.em.eee_setting, hw.em.msix, hw.em.smart_pwr_down, hw.em.sbp
Document use of hw.em.num_queues and the new kernel option EM_MULTIQUEUE
Thanks to Intel for their continued support of FreeBSD.
Reviewed by: erj jfv hiren gnn wblock
Obtained from: Intel Corporation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1994
Previously the OACTIVE flag was being set when the tx descriptors are fully
allocated but it wasn't unset anywhere.
As soon as a packet is transmitted, unset the OACTIVE flag and call start
routine to push any pending packets from the tx queue.
This closes another race where a full tx queue would jam the tx path (tx
queue is full, new packets cannot be added to queue and dwc_txstart never
gets called).
This fatal mismatch appeared to be absolutely harmless, since both structs
have pointer to struct ifnet as their first member, and they both point to
the same ifnet. And the first member is the only one used from the argument.
When providing memory map information to userland, populate the vnode pointer
for tmpfs files. Set the memory mapping to appear as a vnode type, to match
FreeBSD 9 behavior.
This fixes the use of tmpfs files with the dtrace pid provider,
procstat -v, procfs, linprocfs, pmc (pmcstat), and ptrace (PT_VM_ENTRY).
Submitted by: Eric Badger <eric@badgerio.us> (initial revision)
Obtained from: Dell Inc.
PR: 198431
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: kib (mentor)
applying them to em(4).
Rely on iterations through the local timer, and the tx queue state to
determine if an actual hang has occurred. Any time a descriptor is used
(packet sent), the tx queue is flagged as busy. Then when txeof runs, it
either clears the flag when all is clean, or resets it to 1 if ANY are
cleaned, if nothing is cleaned it increments the flag.
Local timer simply checks to see if busy ever reaches MAX (10, which
is compile time configurable), and then sets it as HUNG, at that point
there is one more timer cycle in which to have any cleans, if not a
watchdog reset will occur.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2019
Submitted by: jfv
Reviewed by: hiren
Obtained from: Intel Corporation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
stage processing is only allowed after the setup complete event has
been received. Else a race may occur and the OUT data can be corrupted.
While at it ensure resetting a FIFO has the required wait loop.
MFC after: 3 days
NOTE: This is a technology preview, while it has undergone
development testing, Intel has not yet completed full
validation of the feature. It is being integrated for
early access and customer testing.
NOTE: This is a technology preview, while it has undergone development
tests, Intel has not yet completed full validation of the feature.
It is being integrated for early access and customer testing.
tend to be invalid. On a Beaglebone Black, we get 8192 sectors per
track and that causes major breakages.
Differential Revision: D2646
Reviewed by: ian@ imp@
buildkernel run.
Some of them were write-only under some kernel options, e.g. variables
keeping values only used by CTR() macros. It costs nothing to the
code readability and correctness to eliminate the warnings in those
cases too by removing the local cached values used only for
single-access.
Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2665
Reviewed by: rodrigc
Looked at by: bjk
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
DEBUG_FLAGS are set to DEBUG option value when kernel is built.
For example, it is -g in GENERIC config to have debug symbols.
Also DEBUG_FLAGS are used to determine if ctfconvert should keep
debug symbols.
Since we redefined DEBUG_FLAGS, debug symbols were always missing.
ctfconvert complains about it during kernel build.
It is incorrect to append DEBUG_FLAGS, since if DEBUG has no -g (or
similar), we'll have no debug symbols and ctfconvert will complain.
If it incorrect to always have -g in our DEBUG_FLAGS, since debug
symbols presence should be controllable by kernel config.
So, just add disabled by default addition of -DDEBUG=1 to CFLAGS.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2666
Leaf drivers should not import the PCI bus interface to add IOV handling.
Instead, move the IOV client methods to a separate kobj interface.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2584
Reviewed by: rstone
- Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright
dates.
- Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI).
- Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can
select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD.
- Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or
not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not
Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the
mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And,
since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was
simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs.
- Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a
failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that
require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to
handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called
mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348)
- Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are
not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and
makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function
called mpssas_prepare_tm().
- Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address
for a SATA disk.
- Fixed some formatting and whitespace.
- Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd
PR: 191348
Reviewed by: ken, scottl
Approved by: ken, scottl
MFC after: 1 week
message synced to the changes in r283632, those changes are now backed out.
Another commit will be done that is exactly the same as r283632 except it will
have to correct commit message.
Approved by: ken, scottl, asomers, gibbs
amount of memory.
- Don't request segsize of BUS_SPACE_MAXSIZE_32BIT, when maxsize is
MCLBYTES.
With this change bwi_attach() can succeed on i386.
Submitted by: scottl
Smart NICs with firmware (eg wpi, iwn, the new atheros parts, the intel 7260
series, etc) support doing a lot of things in firmware. This includes but
isn't limited to things like scanning, sending probe requests and receiving
probe responses. However, net80211 doesn't know about any of this - it still
drives the whole scan/probe infrastructure itself.
In order to move towards suppoting smart NICs, the receive path needs to
know about the channel/details for each received packet. In at least
the iwn and 7260 firmware (and I believe wpi, but I haven't tried it yet)
it will do the scanning, power-save and off-channel buffering for you -
all you need to do is handle receiving beacons and probe responses on
channels that aren't what you're currently on. However the whole receive
path is peppered with ic->ic_curchan and manual scan/powersave handling.
The beacon parsing code also checks ic->ic_curchan to determine if the
received beacon is on the correct channel or not.[1]
So:
* add freq/ieee values to ieee80211_rx_stats;
* change ieee80211_parse_beacon() to accept the 'current' channel
as an argument;
* modify the iv_input() and iv_recv_mgmt() methods to include the rx_stats;
* add a new method - ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() - that looks up
a channel based on the contents of ieee80211_rx_stats;
* if it exists, use it in the mgmt path to switch the current channel
(which still defaults to ic->ic_curchan) over to something determined
by rx_stats.
This is enough to kick-start scan offload support in the Intel 7260
driver that Rui/I are working on. It also is a good start for scan
offload support for a handful of existing NICs (wpi, iwn, some USB
parts) and it'll very likely dramatically improve stability/performance
there. It's not the whole thing - notably, we don't need to do powersave,
we should not scan all channels, and we should leave probe request sending
to the firmware and not do it ourselves. But, this allows for continued
development on the above features whilst actually having a somewhat
working NIC.
TODO:
* Finish tidying up how the net80211 input path works.
Right now ieee80211_input / ieee80211_input_all act as the top-level
that everything feeds into; it should change so the MIMO input routines
are those and the legacy routines are phased out.
* The band selection should be done by the driver, not by the net80211
layer.
* ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() only determines 11b or 11g channels
for now - this is enough for scanning, but not 100% true in all cases.
If we ever need to handle off-channel scan support for things like
static-40MHz or static-80MHz, or turbo-G, or half/quarter rates,
then we should extend this.
[1] This is a side effect of frequency-hopping and CCK modes - you
can receive beacons when you think you're on a different channel.
In particular, CCK (which is used by the low 11b rates, eg beacons!)
is decodable from adjacent channels - just at a low SNR.
FH is a side effect of having the hardware/firmware do the frequency
hopping - it may pick up beacons transmitted from other FH networks
that are in a different phase of hopping frequencies.
Support 7xxx adapters including firmware-assisted TSO and VLAN tagging:
- Solarflare Flareon Ultra 7000 series 10/40G adapters:
- Solarflare SFN7042Q QSFP+ Server Adapter
- Solarflare SFN7142Q QSFP+ Server Adapter
- Solarflare Flareon Ultra 7000 series 10G adapters:
- Solarflare SFN7022F SFP+ Server Adapter
- Solarflare SFN7122F SFP+ Server Adapter
- Solarflare SFN7322F Precision Time Synchronization Server Adapter
- Solarflare Flareon 7000 series 10G adapters:
- Solarflare SFN7002F SFP+ Server Adapter
Support utilities to configure adapters and update firmware.
The work is done by Solarflare developers
(Andy Moreton, Andrew Lee and many others),
Artem V. Andreev <Artem.Andreev at oktetlabs.ru> and me.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Causually read by: gnn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2618
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/leds/leds-gpio.txt
Without this booting the VSATV102 causes the blue "working" led to turn
off when the kernel starts up. With this the led (which is turned on by
the firmware) stays on since that's the default state specified in the FDT.
Expanded the meaning of the led_create_state state parameter in order
to implement support for "keep". The original values were:
== 0 Off
!= 0 On
The new values are:
== -1 don't change / keep current setting
== 0 Off
!= -1 && != 0 On
This should have no effect on acpi_asus_attach which only calls
led_create_state with state set to 1. Updated acpi_ibm_attach
in order to avoid surprises.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2615
Submitted by: John Wehle
Reviewed by: gonzo, loos
years for head. However, it is continuously misused as the mpsafe argument
for callout_init(9). Deprecate the flag and clean up callout_init() calls
to make them more consistent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2613
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Kernel under stress load, mixed MC reboot and sfupdate really
generates TSO packet with RST flag.
It will generate many TCP packets with RST flag set.
May be RST flag should be set in the last segment only, but it could be
dropped. So, it is safer to keep the flag in all packets to be sure that
connection is reset.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2609
files to vendor-provided ones. It should make easier to adopt platform
code to new revisions of hardware and to use DTS overlays for various
Beaglebone extensions (shields/capes).
Original dts filenames were not changed, they're now wrappers over dts
files provided by TI. So make sure you update .dtb files on your
devices as part of kernel update
GPIO addressing was changed: instead of one global /dev/gpioc0 there
are per-bank instances of /dev/gpiocX. Each bank has 32 pins so for
instance pin 121 on /dev/gpioc0 in old addressing scheme is now pin 25
on /dev/gpioc3
On Pandaboard serial console devices was changed from /dev/ttyu0 to
/dev/ttyu2 so you'll have to update /etc/ttys to get login prompt
on serial port in multiuser mode. Single user mode serial console
should work as-is
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2146
Reviewed by: rpaulo, ian, Michal Meloun, Svatopluk Kraus
Some FDT nodes have complex properties organized as a child sub-nodes
(e.g. timing for LCD panel) we need easy way to obtain handles for
these sub-nodes
Also remove the checks for IFCAP_LRO in bxe_alloc_fp_buffers() and bxe_pf_rx_q_prep() since both TPA and Jumbo can use SGE ring.
Submitted by:gary.zambrano@qlogic.com
Approved by:davidcs@freebsd.org
MFC after:5 days
MTU + any required pad. Now when this size greater than MJUMPAGESIZE, the packet is spanned across multiple buffers and the
mbufs are stiched together.
Submitted by:gary.zambrano@qlogic.com
Approved by:davidcs@freebsd.org
this value at runtime.
The SD card specification says that a block write or a block erase can take
up to 250ms to complete and thus, under some circumstances, the existent 2
seconds timeout was triggering with normal usage.
This change fixes the sporadic controller timeout that happens on RPi and
RPi 2.
Discussed with: ian (some time ago)
bridges only supported Intel Pentium and Pentium II era processors and there
is no reason for hardware virtualizations to emulate these quirks.
MFC after: 1 week
This is based on the patch sent by Alexander Fedorov with the following
fixes/improvements:
- Better error handling;
- Clock is derived from PLL6 (obtained from netbsd);
- No more unnecessary busy loops on interrupt handler;
- style(9) fixes and code cleanup.
I also want to thanks Martin Galvan who has sent an alternative
implementation with some interesting fixes.
Tested on CubieBoard2, Banana-Pi (thanks to netgate!) and Cubieboard1
(Pratik Singhal).
This is intended to pave the way for the upcoming GSoC work (and make
easier the build of images for the supported boards).
PR: 196081
Submitted by: Alexander Fedorov <alexander.fedorov@rtlservice.com>
boards, this prevents some error messages during enumeration and also
gives us the correct erase block size. They appear to be harmless
elsewhere.
# Note: we treat too many commands as 'can't fail' if they don't work
# after a couple of retries. We need to fix that, but not today...
In both cases, the the effect of the bug was that a very small positive
number was written to the counter. This means that a large number of
events needed to occur before the next sampling interrupt would trigger.
Even with very frequently occurring events like clock cycles wrapping all
the way around could take a long time. Both bugs occurred when updating
the saved reload count for an outgoing thread on a context switch.
First, the counter-independent code compares the current reload count
against the count set when the thread switched in and generates a delta
to apply to the saved count. If this delta causes the reload counter
to go negative, it would add a full reload interval to wrap it around to
a positive value. The fix is to add the full reload interval if the
resulting counter is zero.
Second, occasionally the raw counter value read during a context switch
has actually wrapped, but an interrupt has not yet triggered. In this
case the existing logic would return a very large reload count (e.g.
2^48 - 2 if the counter had overflowed by a count of 2). This was seen
both for fixed-function and programmable counters on an E5-2643.
Workaround this case by returning a reload count of zero.
PR: 198149
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2557
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
This removes one of the frequent causes of ABI breakage when new CPU
types are added to hwpmc(4).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2586
Reviewed by: davide, emaste, gnn (earlier version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
HDA association descriptors. This fixes a crash during device probe
for some HDA PCI devices.
Reported by: David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org>
Reviewed by: mav @
MFC after: 1 week
Also return error if TSO is requested without Tx checksum offload.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2564
It just affects capabilities of the created VLAN interface.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2563
If TxQ lock is obtained, deferred packet list shold be serviced even if
the packet addition fails because of overflow.
Without the patch freeze happens if:
- queue is not blocked (i.e. completion does not trigger unblock and service)
- put-list overflow (1024 entries)
- sfxge_tx_packet_add() acquires TxQ lock just as it is released it in
sfxge_tx_qdpl_service() on the second CPU but before pending check
- sfxge_tx_packet_add() swizzles put-list to get-list, fails because of
non-tcp get-list overflow and returns without packet list service
- sfxge_tx_qdpl_service() on the second CPU checks that there are no
pending packets in the put-list and returns
Other possible solution is to guaranee that maximum length of the put-list
is less than maximum length of any get-list.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2562
The driver uses ifm_data to save capabilities mask calculated during
initialization when supported phy modes are discovered.
The patch simply calculates it when either media or options are changed.
Reviewed by: glebius
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2540
It is required for the next patch which adds dependency of TSO
capabilities from Tx checksum offloads.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2553
* simplify channel logic for determining RF gain setting in scan setup
* don't set TX timer on error
* free node references for unsent frames on device stop
* set maxfrags to IWN_MAX_SCATTER-1 (first segment is used by TX command)
* add missing IWN_UNLOCK() from interrupt path when the hardware
disappears.
* pass control frames to host
* nitems() instead of local macro
Tested:
* Intel 5100, STA mode
PR: kern/196264
Submitted by: Andriy Voskoboinyk <s3erios@gmail.com>
It is a preparation to the next patch which will service packet queue even
if packet addtion fails.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2552
Now each branch has one and only one possible TxQ lock state.
It simplifies understanding of the code.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2551
We can't disable it in HW, but we can ignore result.
Discard Rx descriptor checksum flags if Rx checksum offload is off.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2544
was granted via rings and ni_bufs_list_head represented in those rings
and lists (e.g., via SIGKILL), those buffers are no longer available
for subsequent users for the lifetime of the system. To mitigate this
resource leak, reset the allocator state when the last ref to that
allocator is released.
Note that this only recovers leaked resources for an allocator when
there are no longer any users of that allocator, so there remain
circumstances in which leaked allocator resources may not ever be
recovered - consider a set of multiple netmap processes that are all
using the same allocator (say, the global allocator) where members of
that set may be killed and restarted over time but at any given point
there is one member of that set running.
Based on intial work by adrian@.
Reviewed by: Giuseppe Lettieri (g.lettieri@iet.unipi.it), luigi
Approved by: jmallett (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
It simplifies understanding of the sfxge_tx_packet_add() logic and
avoids passing of 'locked' to called function.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2547
It is simply not required since the kernel checks corresponding
IFCAP_TSOx capability and CSUM_TSO in hw-assisted offloads.
Note that CSUM_TSO is two bits (CSUM_IP_TSO|CSUM_IP6_TSO) and both bits
are set in IPv4 and IPv6 mbufs.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2546
Also it is cheaper to check Rx descriptor flags than TCP protocol in IP
header.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2542
Netfront has to wait for the backend to switch to state XenbusStateConnected
before sending the ARP request, or else the backend might not be connected
and thus the packet will be lost.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
MFC after: 1 week
Tx checksum offload may be enabled/disabled.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2543
Split IFCAP_HWCSUM to IFCAP_RXCSUM and IFCAP_TXCSUM to highlight Tx and Rx.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2541
Summary:
The Freescale PCIe Root Complex shows up as a Processor class device, PowerPC
subclass, so the generic PCI code ignores it for a bridge. This adds support
for it.
As part of this, update the Freescale PCI hostbridge driver, to allow probing
beyond the root complex, instead of only allowing "proper" PCI-PCI bridges.
Reviewers: #powerpc, marcel, nwhitehorn
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2442
Relnotes: yes
results.
Right now the scan infrastructure assumes the channel is under net80211
control, and that when receiving beacon frames for scanning, the
current channel is indeed what ic_curchan is set to.
But firmware NICs with firmware scan support need more than this -
they can do background scans whilst hiding the off-channel behaviour
from net80211. Ie, net80211 still thinks everything is associated
and on the main channel, but it's getting scan results from all the
background traffic.
However sta_add() pays attention to ic_curchan and discards scan
results that aren't on the right channel. CCK beacon frames can be
decoded from adjacent channels so the receive path and sta_add
discard these as appropriate. This is fine for software scanning
like for ath(4), but not for firmware NICs. So with those, the
whole concept of background firmware scanning won't work without
major hacks (eg, overriding ic_curchan before calling the beacon
input / scan add.)
As part of my scan overhaul, modify sta_add() and the scan_add()
APIs to take an explicit current channel. The normal RX path
will set it to ic_curchan so it's a no-op. However, drivers may
decide to (eventually!) override the scan method to set the
"right" current channel based on what the firmware reports the
scan state is.
So for example, iwn, rsu and other NICs will eventually do this:
* driver issues scan start firmware command;
* firmware sends a "scan start on channel X" notify;
* firmware sends a bunch of beacon RX's as part of
the scan results;
* .. and the driver will replace scan_add() curchan with channel X,
so scan results are correct.
* firmware sends a "scan start on channel Y" notify;
* firmware sends more beacons...
* .. the driver replaces scan_add() curchan with channel Y.
Note:
* Eventually, net80211 should eventually grow the idea of a per-packet
current channel. It's possible in various modes (eg WAVE, P2P, etc)
that individual frames can come in from different channels and that
is under firmware control rather than driver/net80211 control, so
we should support that.
Several improvements to the Synaptics driver to support
semi-multitouch trackpads and some other fixes:
- Two finger scrolling support for "semi-MT" touchpads. Those include
many of the older Synaptics touchpads before "true" multitouch support
(indicated by capMultiFinger). Semi-MT touchpads can report a second
finger position, but the X or Y coordinate may be swapped with some
coordinate of the first finger. This is a result of how the hardware
works internally. Therefore, all that can be reliably extracted is the
bounding box of the two finger positions. Semi-MT touchpads can be
recognized by the capAdvancedGestures capability bit. After setting the
mode byte, advanced gestures mode has to be enabled. Then, data packets
compatible with the capMultiFinger format are sent, so the same two
finger scrolling code can be leveraged. Enabling advanced gestures mode
on true multitouch touchpads should be harmless. Linux seems to always
enable advanced gestures mode.
- Put mode setting logic into own functions synaptics_preferred_mode()
and synaptics_set_mode() to have this in one place.
synaptics_passthrough_on() and synaptics_passthrough_off() currently
always use 0xc1 as the mode byte, which may be wrong for touchpads that
don't have capExtended.
- Expose X and Y resolution of touchpad to userland. Also expose minimum
and maximum X and Y coordinates. This is useful for programs in
userspace that read raw PSM packets (with PSM_LEVEL_NATIVE enabled) and
need to interpret the coordinates.
- Also send "extended w mode" packets (see section 3.2.9 of
511-000275-01_RevB.pdf) to userspace if PSM_LEVEL_NATIVE is enabled.
This is useful for userspace programs/drivers such as
xf86-input-synaptics that can handle these packets.
- Fix parsing of nExtendedQueries, and request extended/continued
capability bits depending on this value.
- capReportsMax, capClearPad, capAdvancedGestures and capCoveredPad must
be extracted from status[0] and not status[2], I think.
Submitted by: Jan Kokemüller jan.kokemueller at gmail.com
bus_alloc_resource(), bus_release_resource() and bus_set_resource()
(bus_generic_rl_alloc_resource(), bus_generic_rl_release_resource() and
bus_generic_rl_set_resource() respectively).
Do not print the resources for nomatch devices.
Use the inherited method for bus_get_resource_list() on ofw_iicbus.c.
Submitted by: jhb and Michal Meloun (D2033)
interacts with interrupts, query ACPI and use MWAIT for entrance into
Cx sleep states. Support C1 "I/O then halt" mode. See Intel'
document 302223-007 "Intelб╝ Processor Vendor-Specific ACPI Interface
Specification" for description.
Move the acpi_cpu_c1() function into x86/cpu_machdep.c and use
it instead of inlining "sti; hlt" sequence in several places.
In the acpi(4) man page, besides documenting the dev.cpu.N.cx_methods
sysctl, correct the names for dev.cpu.N.{cx_usage,cx_lowest,cx_supported}
sysctls.
Both jkim and avg have some other patches implementing the mwait
functionality; this work is unrelated. Linux does not rely on the
ACPI to provide correct tables describing Cx modes. Instead, the
driver has pre-defined knowledge of the CPU models, it was supplied by
Intel.
Tested by: pho (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
127 and decrease the maximum number of sub-channels to 1. These
definitions are only used inside the kernel and can be changed later
if more than one sub-channel is desired. This has been done to allow
so-called USB audio rack modules to work with FreeBSD.
Bump the FreeBSD version to force recompiling all external modules.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: mav
and is not applicable unless the integer pointer is NULL. Set it to
zero to avoid confusion. While at it remove extra semicolon at the end
of the "VT_SYSCTL_INT()" macro.
MFC after: 1 week
function. This fixes an issue where X11 keyboard input can appear
stuck. The cause of the problem is a duplicate TTY device window
switch IOCTL during boot, which leaves the "vt_switch_timer" running,
because the current window is already selected. While at it factor out
some NULL checks.
PR: 200032
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2480
Reported by: several people
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: emaste
In order to map memory from other domains when running on Xen FreeBSD uses
unused physical memory regions. Until now this memory has been allocated
using bus_alloc_resource, but this is not completely safe as we can end up
using unreclaimed MMIO or ACPI regions.
Fix this by introducing a new newbus method that can be used by Xen drivers
to request for unused memory regions. On amd64 we make sure this memory
comes from regions above 4GB in order to prevent clashes with MMIO/ACPI
regions. On i386 there's nothing we can do, so just fall back to the
previous mechanism.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Tested by: Gustau Pérez <gperez@entel.upc.edu>
1. While disabling interrupt the FW disables interrupts for only 16 vectors.
In case of Invader which supports 96 MSI-x vectors, some spurious interrupts
may come on other vectors even after interrupt disable. So, driver uses a flag
and ignores the spurious interrupts.
2. Reply queue depth is made double the number of commands supported by FW.
3. Misplaced interrupt enable code is now moved down in the OCR path.
4. Updated error handling code in OCR path.
5. Removed un-necessary print.
Reviewed by: ambrisko
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: AVAGO Technologies
issued through the ioctl() interface prior to the kill adapter. This ensures
userspace ioctl() system calls issued just before a kill adapter don't get stuck in
wait state and IOCTLs are returned to application.
Reviewed by: ambrisko
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: AVAGO Technologies
MEGASAS_HBA_OPERATIONAL before getting new RAID map.
There will be a small window where IO will come from OS with old RAID map.
This patch will update adapter state to MEGASAS_HBA_OPERATIONAL,
only after driver has new RAID map to avoid any IOs getting build using old RAID map.
Reviewed by: ambrisko
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: AVAGO Technologies
for two Drive Raid-1 configuration only.
Now, Driver support fast path read load balancing for all (any number of disk) Raid-1 configuration.
Reviewed by: ambrisko
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: AVAGO Technologies
FW expose Secure Jbod support via Controller properity.
Firmware expect IOs to be received from different IO path than
conventional fast path queue, in case of SED drives.
To have Secure jbod support user need driver and firmware support.
Reviewed by: ambrisko
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: AVAGO Technologies
initialize the MFUNC registers. Our old test of assuming that if this
register is set at all is not quite right. Many scenarios (including
the power-on defaults for chips w/o EEPROMs) land us in trouble. The
MFUNC0 pin should be set to signal #INTA and the MFUNC1 pin should be
set to signal #INTB of multi-socketed devices. Since my memory recalls
issues with blindly clearing the upper bytes of this register, perform
the heuristic only when both MFUNC0 and 1 are clear. We won't work
well using these pins for GPIO, and the serial interrupts won't save
us because we go out of our way to generally disable them. They are
needed to support legacy drivers for 16-bit PC Cards that are
hard-wired to specific IRQ values. Since FreeBSD never had any of
these, we configure the more reliable direct signaling. This was just
one small piece of that which had been left out back in the day.
Summary:
This has been tested on the RB800, but should work on the RB333, RB600, and
RB1100 as well.
It's currently missing ECC support, but read and write are complete.
Reviewers: imp
Reviewed By: imp
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2223
interface without breaking ABI or API compatibility with existing drivers.
The existing data structures used to communicate between the kernel and
driver portions of PPS processing contain no spare/padding fields and no
flags field or other straightforward mechanism for communicating changes
in the structures or behaviors of the code. This makes it difficult to
MFC new features added to the PPS facility. ABI compatibility is
important; out-of-tree drivers in module form are known to exist. (Note
that the existing api_version field in the pps_params structure must
contain the value mandated by RFC 2783 and any RFCs that come along after.)
These changes introduce a pair of abi-version fields which are filled in
by the driver and the kernel respectively to indicate the interface
version. The driver sets its version field before calling the new
pps_init_abi() function. That lets the kernel know how much of the
pps_state structure is understood by the driver and it can avoid using
newer fields at the end of the structure that it knows about if the driver
is a lower version. The kernel fills in its version field during the init
call, letting the driver know what features and data the kernel supports.
To implement the new version information in a way that is backwards
compatible with code from before these changes, the high bit of the
lightly-used 'kcmode' field is repurposed as a flag bit that indicates the
driver is aware of the abi versioning scheme. Basically if this bit is
clear that indicates a "version 0" driver and if it is set the driver_abi
field indicates the version.
These changes also move the recently-added 'mtx' field of pps_state from
the middle to the end of the structure, and make the kernel code that uses
this field conditional on the driver being abi version 1 or higher. It
changes the only driver currently supplying the mtx field, usb_serial, to
use pps_init_abi().
Reviewed by: hselasky@
History note: it's good to document what the driver expects like this even
if it's currently a no-op.
Submitted by: Andriy Voskoboinyk <s3erios@gmail.com>
Change the nvlist_recv() function to take additional argument that
specifies flags expected on the received nvlist. Receiving a nvlist with
different set of flags than the ones we expect might lead to undefined
behaviour, which might be potentially dangerous.
Update consumers of this and related functions and update the tests.
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
Update man page for nvlist_unpack, nvlist_recv, nvlist_xfer, cap_recv_nvlist
and cap_xfer_nvlist.
Reviewed by: AllanJude
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
These include standalone X550 adapters, X552 10GbE backplane, and
X552/X557-AT 10GBASE-T; with the latter two being integrated into Xeon D SoCs.
As well, this bumps the ixgbe version number to 2.8.3, and includes updates
to shared code for support for the new devices.
Differential Revision: D2414
Reviewed by: gnn, adrian
Approved by: jfv (mentor), gnn (mentor)
- Use hardware counters for ifnet stats in igb(4) when possible. This
ensures these stats include packets that bypass the regular stack via
netmap.
- Don't derefence values off the end of the igb(4) VF stats structure.
Instead, add a dedicated if_get_counter method for igb(4) VF interfaces.
- Report missed packets on igb(4) as input queue drops rather than an
input error.
- Report bug_ring drop counts as output queue drops for igb(4) and ixgbe(4).
- Export the buf_ring drop stats for individual rings via sysctl on
ixgbe(4).
- Fix a typo that in ixl(4) that caused output queue drops to be reported
as input queue drops and input queue drops to be unreported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2402
Reviewed by: jfv, rstone (6)
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
remains. Xen is planning to phase out support for PV upstream since it
is harder to maintain and has more overhead. Modern x86 CPUs include
virtualization extensions that support HVM guests instead of PV guests.
In addition, the PV code was i386 only and not as well maintained recently
as the HVM code.
- Remove the i386-only NATIVE option that was used to disable certain
components for PV kernels. These components are now standard as they
are on amd64.
- Remove !XENHVM bits from PV drivers.
- Remove various shims required for XEN (e.g. PT_UPDATES_FLUSH, LOAD_CR3,
etc.)
- Remove duplicate copy of <xen/features.h>.
- Remove unused, i386-only xenstored.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2362
Reviewed by: royger
Tested by: royger (i386/amd64 HVM domU and amd64 PVH dom0)
Relnotes: yes
Instead of trying to get the keyboard repeat rate set by the BIOS just set a
default one. This allows removing the usage of x86bios from atkbd.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: jkim, delphij
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2399
MFC after: 2 weeks
Previously the mask wrapped when one or more of the mask bytes extended
past the right edge of the window. Simplify the logic and use the same
byte offset and bit in both the pattern and mask.
PR: 199648
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2360
The change would appease the static analyzers but it is pretty much a
no-op. I need to trust static analyzers much less, especially for the
kernel.
Requested by: jkim
Currently if you ifconfig down a vtnet interface while it is being used
via netmap, the kernel panics due to trying to treat the cookie values
in the virtio rings as mbufs to be freed. When netmap is enabled, these
cookie values are pointers to something else.
Note that other netmap-aware drivers don't seem to need this as they
store the mbuf pointers in the software rings that mirror the hardware
descriptor rings, and since netmap doesn't touch those, the software
state always has NULL mbuf pointers causing the loops to free mbufs to
not do anything. However, vtnet reuses the same state area for both
netmap and non-netmap mode, so it needs to explicitly avoid looking at
the rings and treating the cookie values as mbufs if netmap is
enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2348
Reviewed by: adrian, bryanv, luigi
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
This is a fix to the previous attempt in r281889, which some (most?)
keyboards.
Discussed with: emaste, jkim
Found by: clang static analyzer
CID: 1007072
CID: 1007073
CID: 1007074
On one of my systems FreeBSD will fail to boot because vt_vga gets stuck
waiting for the vertical retrace if there's no monitor attached. Fix this by
adding a timeout and exiting if the vertical retrace times out.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: emaste, dumbbell
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2397
- Vmbus multi channel support.
- Vector interrupt support.
- Signal optimization.
- Storvsc driver performance improvement.
- Scatter and gather support for storvsc driver.
- Minor bug fix for KVP driver.
Thanks royger, jhb and delphij from FreeBSD community for the reviews
and comments. Also thanks Hovy Xu from NetApp for the contributions to
the storvsc driver.
PR: 195238
Submitted by: whu
Reviewed by: royger, jhb, delphij
Approved by: royger
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
controllers.
Call iicbus_transfer() from the device context and not from the iicbus
context.
I am committing a slightly different patch, so if something break, it is
probably my fault.
PR: 199496
Submitted by: Juraj Lutter <otis@sk.FreeBSD.org>
vt_is_cursor_in_area needs to return true if any part of the mouse
cursor is visible in the rectangle area. Replace the existing test with
a simpler version of a test for overlapping rectangles.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2356
Reviewed by: ray
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
are not permitted to sleep. Only use the IPMI watchdog with backends
which poll driver-initiated requests to meet this requirement.
In practice this means that watchdogs will no longer be used on systems
that use the SSIF backend.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2062
MFC after: 2 weeks
Al kudos here for the Clang static analyzer which, unlike Coverity,
failed to flag a false positive.
Found by: clang static analyzer
CID: 1007072
CID: 1007073
CID: 1007074
MFC after: 1 week
(type 1 and type 2) as well as leaf devices (type 0). In particular,
this allows the existing PCI bus logic to save and restore capability
registers such as MSI and PCI-express work for bridge devices rather than
requiring that code to be duplicated in bridge drivers. It also means
that bridge drivers no longer need to save and restore basic registers
such as the PCI command register or BARs nor manage powerstates for the
bridge device.
While here, pci_setup_secbus() has been changed to initialize the 'sec'
and 'sub' fields in the 'secbus' structure instead of requiring the pcib
and pccbb drivers to do this in the NEW_PCIB + PCI_RES_BUS case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2240
Reviewed by: imp, jmg
MFC after: 2 weeks
driver's suspend and resume routines. These have been redundant no-ops
since r214065 changed the PCI bus driver to manage power states for
all devices (including type 1/2 bridge devices) during suspend and resume.
for type 0 devices, not type 1 or 2 bridges. Don't read them for bridge
devices during bus scans and return an error when attempting to read them
as ivars for bridge devices.
It is not network-specific code and would
be better as part of libkern instead.
Move zlib.h and zutil.h from net/ to sys/
Update includes to use sys/zlib.h and sys/zutil.h instead of net/
Submitted by: Steve Kiernan stevek@juniper.net
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
GitHub Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/28
Relnotes: yes
RSS hash from the card. We do not need to hide that under "ifdef RSS" and should
expose that by default so others like lagg(4) can use that and avoid hashing the
traffic by themselves.
While here, improve comments and get rid of hidden/unimplemented RSS support
code for UDP.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2296
Reviewed by: jfv, erj
Discussed with: adrian
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
--Allow multiple open iic fds by storing addressing state in cdevpriv
--Fix, as much as possible, the baked-in race conditions in the iic
ioctl interface by requesting bus ownership on I2CSTART, releasing it on
I2CSTOP/I2CRSTCARD, and requiring bus ownership by the current cdevpriv
to use the I/O ioctls
--Reduce internal iic buffer size and remove 1K read/write limit by
iteratively calling iicbus_read/iicbus_write
--Eliminate dynamic allocation in I2CWRITE/I2CREAD
--Move handling of I2CRDWR to separate function and improve error handling
--Add new I2CSADDR ioctl to store address in current cdevpriv so that
I2CSTART is not needed for read(2)/write(2) to work
--Redesign iicbus_request_bus() and iicbus_release_bus():
--iicbus_request_bus() no longer falls through if the bus is already
owned by the requesting device. Multiple threads on the same device may
want exclusive access. Also, iicbus_release_bus() was never
device-recursive anyway.
--Previously, if IICBUS_CALLBACK failed in iicbus_release_bus(), but
the following iicbus_poll() call succeeded, IICBUS_CALLBACK would not be
issued again
--Do not hold iicbus mtx during IICBUS_CALLBACK call. There are
several drivers that may sleep in IICBUS_CALLBACK, if IIC_WAIT is passed.
--Do not loop in iicbus_request_bus if IICBUS_CALLBACK returns
EWOULDBLOCK; instead pass that to the caller so that it can retry if so
desired.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2140
Reviewed by: imp, jhb, loos
Approved by: kib (mentor)
the index array, not a value for BMCR register. In case of IFM_10_T there
could be either MII_MEDIA_10_T or MII_MEDIA_10_T_FDX, which are 1 and 2,
accordingly. Neither matches a valid BMCR value. My guessing is that this
write is harmless, since later mii_phy_setmedia() would write a proper
value there.
The code is here since the initial checkin. Note that case IFM_100_TX has
the same comment, but a proper value of BMCR_ISO is written. So, collapse
two cases into one, always writing there BMCR_ISO.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
set any value to ifm_data. If brgphy ever to call mii_phy_setmedia(),
then the value of BRGPHY_S1000 | BRGPHY_BMCR_FDX will trigger KASSERT.
While here, remove the obfuscating macro and wrap long lines.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
its use in upcoming code.
This is inspired by something in jhb's NUMA IRQ allocation patchset.
However, the tricky bit here is that the PXM lookup for a node may
fail, requiring a lookup on the parent node. So if it doesn't
exist, don't fail - just go up to the parent. Only error out of the
lookup is the ACPI lookup returns an error.
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
This supports e500v1, e500v2, and e500mc. Tested only on e500v2, but the
performance counters are identical across all, with e500mc having some
additional events.
Relnotes: Yes
On trackpads that had support for both, we were sending two button
events when the trackpad was pressed.
Tested by: Jakob Alvermark <jakob at alvermark.net>
MFC after: 1 week
This requires a patch to redirect the output to a separate DAC when
the headphones are used. While there, add device strings for Intel
Broadwell HDA controllers and Realtek ALC292 codecs.
MFC after: 1 week
'BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT'. This allows bhyve's 'ppt' driver to claim ownership
of the device and pass it through to the guest.
In the common case where there are no competing drivers for USB controllers
this change is a no-op.
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 2 weeks
This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.
The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.
The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.
This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
handles versions 0.1 and 0.2 of the standard on 32-bit ARM.
With this driver we can shutdown in QEMU. Further work is needed to
turn secondary cores on on boot and to support later revisions of the
specification.
Submitted by: Robin Randhawa <Robin.Randhawa at ARM.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
"Intelб╝ Processor Vendor-Specific ACPI Interface Specification",
issied Dec 2014. Previous revision 005 was from Sep 2006.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
To accomplish this, we must put the Synaptics hardware in passthrough
mode when talking to the trackpoint.
I only performed minor style modifications.
Submitted by: Jan Kokemüller <jan.kokemueller at gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Enable two finger scrolling by default and disable the edge scrolling if
the touchpad has no physical zone for it. Disable directional scrolling
by default to avoid using extended buttons as scroll buttons.
Add support for ClickPad. On Lenovo laptops, this is the button
reported when one presses the touchpad.
While there, fix a problem where the extended buttons were not reporting
the button release event correctly: we need to save the state of the
buttons and report it to sysmouse until we receive a packet from the
touchpad indicating the button has been released. This makes it
possible to use an extended button to resize a window. On Lenovo
laptops, the major buttons are actually reported as extended buttons.
Tested by: many (current@)
MFC after: 1 week
This is needed with the pl011 driver. Before this change it would default
to a shift of 0, however the hardware places the registers at 4-byte
addresses meaning the value should be 2.
This patch fixes this for the pl011 when configured using the fdt. The
other drivers have a default value of 0 to keep this a no-op.
MFC after: 1 week