Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Justin Hibbits
b2f831c009 Simplify the page tracking for VA<->PA translations.
Drop the tracking down to the pmap layer, with optimizations to only track
necessary pages.  This should give a (slight) performance improvement, as well
as a stability improvement, as the tracking is already mostly handled by the
pmap layer.
2016-11-16 05:24:42 +00:00
Justin Hibbits
f77405e334 Use proper integer-pointer type conversions.
As part of an effort to extend Book-E to the 64-bit world, make the necessary
changes to the DPAA/dTSEC driver set to be integer-pointer conversion clean.
This means no more casts to int, and use uintptr_t where needed.

Since the NCSW source is effectively obsolete, direct changes to the source tree
are safe.
2016-10-18 00:55:15 +00:00
Justin Hibbits
7b4385fff2 Minor optimizations to dTSEC glue code
Don't call pmap_kextract() multiple times, it wastes CPU cycles, which in a high
performance environment can be very expensive.

Inline XX_FindTracker() to allow more optimizations as well.
2016-10-08 05:26:45 +00:00
Jean-Sébastien Pédron
bd937497ea Consistently use device_t
Several files use the internal name of `struct device` instead of
`device_t` which is part of the public API. This patch changes all
`struct device *` to `device_t`.

The remaining occurrences of `struct device` are those referring to the
Linux or OpenBSD version of the structure, or the code is not built on
FreeBSD and it's unclear what to do.

Submitted by:	Matthew Macy <mmacy@nextbsd.org> (previous version)
Approved by:	emaste, jhibbits, sbruno
MFC after:	3 days
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7447
2016-08-09 19:32:06 +00:00
Justin Hibbits
91ebf7d765 Remove SoC-specific integrations from dTSEC, to make it SoC agnostic.
This will allow a single kernel to run on all SoCs supported by the dTSEC driver.

Approved by:	re@(gjb)
2016-07-05 06:16:42 +00:00
Justin Hibbits
a4c2c79097 Zero the newly allocated spinlock.
Not sure how this worked testing with DIAGNOSTIC set, but with it disabled this
fails due to the spinlock being "initialized" with 0xdeadc0de.
2016-04-24 01:38:45 +00:00
Justin Hibbits
0aeed3e993 Add support for the Freescale dTSEC DPAA-based ethernet controller.
Freescale's QorIQ line includes a new ethernet controller, based on their
Datapath Acceleration Architecture (DPAA).  This uses a combination of a Frame
manager, Buffer manager, and Queue manager to improve performance across all
interfaces by being able to pass data directly between hardware acceleration
interfaces.

As part of this import, Freescale's Netcomm Software (ncsw) driver is imported.
This was an attempt by Freescale to create an OS-agnostic sub-driver for
managing the hardware, using shims to interface to the OS-specific APIs.  This
work was abandoned, and Freescale's primary work is in the Linux driver (dual
BSD/GPL license).  Hence, this was imported directly to sys/contrib, rather than
going through the vendor area.  Going forward, FreeBSD-specific changes may be
made to the ncsw code, diverging from the upstream in potentially incompatible
ways.  An alternative could be to import the Linux driver itself, using the
linuxKPI layer, as that would maintain parity with the vendor-maintained driver.
However, the Linux driver has not been evaluated for reliability yet, and may
have issues with the import, whereas the ncsw-based driver in this commit was
completed by Semihalf 4 years ago, and is very stable.

Other SoC modules based on DPAA, which could be added in the future:
* Security and Encryption engine (SEC4.x, SEC5.x)
* RAID engine

Additional work to be done:
* Implement polling mode
* Test vlan support
* Add support for the Pattern Matching Engine, which can do regular expression
  matching on packets.

This driver has been tested on the P5020 QorIQ SoC.  Others listed in the
dtsec(4) manual page are expected to work as the same DPAA engine is included in
all.

Obtained from:	Semihalf
Relnotes:	Yes
Sponsored by:	Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
2016-02-29 03:38:00 +00:00