Add creation, deletion and checksumming operations to the private copy of
TLV functions in the common code. Functions added in preparation for V3
licensing support, as licensing keys are stored in the TLV format. Missing
support for multiple segment partitions added. Annotations for Windows code
analysis also updated.
Submitted by: Richard Houldsworth <rhouldsworth at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6264
Move TLV buffer validation into ef10-specific function and add accessor
function which also converts the partition ID to the internal
representation.
Submitted by: Richard Houldsworth <rhouldsworth at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6263
Turns out that ye olde siba.c is /just/ the siba mips code (used by
the initial SENTRY5 port. However, I don't think it was ever
finished enough to be useful, and I do have this nagging feeling
that we'll eventually replace it with the bhnd code.
But, since bhnd(4) introduced siba.c too, we ended up with a
source file name clash, and that broke the SENTRY5 build.
It /looks/ like this is the only place siba.c / device siba is
used.
* bcma.c - assign different resource IDs for different regions
* bcma_erom.c - workaround for BCM/MIPS bus enumerations
Tested:
* (submitter) Tested on ASUS RT-N16 initially, double checked on ASUS RT-N53
* (landonf) BCM4331
Submitted by: Michael Zhilin <mizkha@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6245
bus_get_cpus() returns a specified set of CPUs for a device. It accepts
an enum for the second parameter that indicates the type of cpuset to
request. Currently two valus are supported:
- LOCAL_CPUS (on x86 this returns all the CPUs in the package closest to
the device when DEVICE_NUMA is enabled)
- INTR_CPUS (like LOCAL_CPUS but only returns 1 SMT thread for each core)
For systems that do not support NUMA (or if it is not enabled in the kernel
config), LOCAL_CPUS fails with EINVAL. INTR_CPUS is mapped to 'all_cpus'
by default. The idea is that INTR_CPUS should always return a valid set.
Device drivers which want to use per-CPU interrupts should start using
INTR_CPUS instead of simply assigning interrupts to all available CPUs.
In the future we may wish to add tunables to control the policy of
INTR_CPUS (e.g. should it be local-only or global, should it ignore
SMT threads or not).
The x86 nexus driver exposes the internal set of interrupt CPUs from the
the x86 interrupt code via INTR_CPUS.
The ACPI bus driver and PCI bridge drivers use _PXM to return a suitable
LOCAL_CPUS set when _PXM exists and DEVICE_NUMA is enabled. They also and
the global INTR_CPUS set from the nexus driver with the per-domain set from
_PXM to generate a local INTR_CPUS set for child devices.
Compared to the r298933, this version uses 'struct _cpuset' in
<sys/bus.h> instead of 'cpuset_t' to avoid requiring <sys/param.h>
(<sys/_cpuset.h> still requires <sys/param.h> for MAXCPU even though
<sys/_bitset.h> does not after recent changes).
Other structures needed by prototypes in t4_tom.h are explicitly
declared in this file, so adding the prototype here seems most
consistent with existing code.
This is due to the DevHandle not being released, which causes the Firmware to
not allow that disk to be re-added.
Reviewed by: ken, scottl, ambrisko, asomers
Approved by: ken, scottl, ambrisko
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6102
To prevent this, move check for done_ccb == NULL to before done_ccb is used in
mprsas_stop_unit_done().
Reviewed by: ken, scottl, ambrisko, asomers
Approved by: ken, scottl, ambrisko
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6099
It was possible to use an invalid pointer to get the target ID value. To fix
this, initialize a local Target ID variable to an invalid value and change that
variable to a valid value only if the pointer to the Target ID is not NULL.
Reviewed by: ken, scottl, ambrisko, asomers
Approved by: ken, scottl, ambrisko
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6100
Use MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK when checking IOCStatus to mask off the log bit, and
make a few more things endian-safe.
Reviewed by: ken, scottl, ambrisko, asomers
Approved by: ken, scottl, ambrisko
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6097
With the removal of Falcon support, this is now dead code.
Submitted by: Andy Moreton <amoreton at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
This patch ensures that client code will fail to build
with Falcon support. Following patches remove Falcon
support code entirely.
sfxge(4) has never supported Falcon.
Submitted by: Andy Moreton <amoreton at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
This adds support for the NVRAM handling and the basic SPROM
hardware used on siba(4) and bcma(4) devices, including:
* SPROM directly attached to the PCI core, accessible via PCI configuration
space.
* SPROM attached to later ChipCommon cores.
* SPROM variables vended from the parent SoC bus (e.g. via a directly-attached
flash device).
Additional improvements to the NVRAM/SPROM interface will
be required, but this changeset stands alone as working
checkpoint.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Reviewed by: Michael Zhilin <mizkha@gmail.com> (Broadcom MIPS support)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6196
This is used by the upcoming SPROM code to match on chipsets
that require special handling of muxed SPROM pins.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6195
This adds additional bhnd_resource shims used by the upcoming SPROM deltas.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6194
This allows bus children to query for the host bridge device, rather
than having to iterate over all attached devices.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6193
Chelsio's TCP offload engine supports direct DMA of received TCP payload
into wired user buffers. This feature is known as Direct-Data Placement.
However, to scale well the adapter needs to prepare buffers for DDP
before data arrives. aio_read() is more amenable to this requirement than
read() as applications often call read() only after data is available in
the socket buffer.
When DDP is enabled, TOE sockets use the recently added pru_aio_queue
protocol hook to claim aio_read(2) requests instead of letting them use
the default AIO socket logic. The DDP feature supports scheduling DMA
to two buffers at a time so that the second buffer is ready for use
after the first buffer is filled. The aio/DDP code optimizes the case
of an application ping-ponging between two buffers (similar to the
zero-copy bpf(4) code) by keeping the two most recently used AIO buffers
wired. If a buffer is reused, the aio/DDP code is able to reuse the
vm_page_t array as well as page pod mappings (a kind of MMU mapping the
Chelsio NIC uses to describe user buffers). The generation of the
vmspace of the calling process is used in conjunction with the user
buffer's address and length to determine if a user buffer matches a
previously used buffer. If an application queues a buffer for AIO that
does not match a previously used buffer then the least recently used
buffer is unwired before the new buffer is wired. This ensures that no
more than two user buffers per socket are ever wired.
Note that this feature is best suited to applications sending a steady
stream of data vs short bursts of traffic.
Discussed with: np
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
When devctl was added, the location string for PCI devices was changed to
use the PCI "selector" that pciconf and devctl accept. However, devd
assumes that location strings are formatted as a list of name=value pairs.
As a result, devd is no longer parsing any of the values out of PCI
device events. Restore the previous format of the PCI location strings
to restore the location and slot keywords in case any devd scripts are
using this. Add the "selector" as a new 'dbsf' location variable.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6253
free'd by the functions following its call, we can simply return instead
of crashing and burning in the event of igb_detach() failing.
PR: 197139
Submitted by: rupavath@juniper.net
MFC after: 2 weeks
The size field in the XENMEM_add_to_physmap_range is an uint16_t, and the
privcmd driver was doing an implicit truncation of an int into an uint16_t
when filling the hypercall parameters.
Fix this by adding a loop and making sure privcmd splits ioctl request into
2^16 chunks when issuing the hypercalls.
Reported and tested by: Marcin Cieslak <saper@saper.info>
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Although usually small, values produced by nitems() are unsigned.
By unsigning the corresponding indexes we avoid signed vs unsigned
comparisons. This may have some effect on performance, although given the
small sizes the effect will not be perceivable, and it makes the code
clearer.
Respect the style of the changed files: one uses u_int while the other
uses "unsigned int".
Reviewed by: hselasky
PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot
registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along
with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register
change.
This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the
PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges
representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge
driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It
also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state
and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of
implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the
child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and
attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot.
The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims
that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a
card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for
config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config
methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet
ready).
These changes include support for various optional HotPlug
capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch,
electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button.
It also includes support for devices which require waiting for
command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug
command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems
which support surprise removal and have none of these optional
capabilities.
PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option
which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc.
Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions)
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
Further to r299119. GCC architectures failed with
bcma_subr.c:138: warning: control reaches end of non-void function
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
"make tinderbox" fails on sparc64 GENERIC-NODEBUG with:
bhnd_subr.c:188: warning: control reaches end of non-void function
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Different versions of firmware have different requirments for TX/RX
packet layouts (and other things, of course.) Currently the driver
checks between 3xx and 4xx firmware by using the BWN_ISOLDFMT() macro,
which doesn't take into account the 5xx firmware (which I think I need
for the HT and N series PHY chips. I'll know when I do the port.)
BWN_HDRSIZE() also needs to learn about the 5xx series firmware
as well.
So:
* add a firmware version enum
* populate it based on the firmware version we read at load time
* don't finish loading if the firmware is the 5xx firmware; any
code using BWN_ISOLDFMT or BWN_HDRSIZE needs updating (most notably
the TX and RX bits.)
Then, for RX RSSI:
* write down and reimplement the b43 rssi calculation method;
* use it for the correct PHYs (which are all the ones we support);
* do the RSSI calculation before radiotap, not after.
Tested:
* Broadcom BCM4312, STA mode
Obtained from: Linux b43 (careful writing and reimplementing; lots of integer math..)
This is an initial work in progress to use the replacement bhnd
bus code for devices which support it.
* Add manpage updates for bhnd, bhndb, siba
* Add kernel options for bhnd, bhndbus, etc
* Add initial support in if_bwn_pci / if_bwn_mac for using bhnd
as the bus transport for suppoted NICs
* if_bwn_pci will eventually be the PCI bus glue to interface to bwn,
which will use the right backend bus to attach to, versus direct
nexus/bhnd attachments (as found in embedded broadcom devices.)
The PCI glue defaults to probing at a lower level than the bwn glue,
so bwn should still attach as per normal without a boot time tunable set.
It's also not fully fleshed out - the bwn probe/attach code needs to be
broken out into platform and bus specific things (just like ath, ath_pci,
ath_ahb) before we can shift the driver over to using this.
Tested:
* BCM4311, STA mode
* BCM4312, STA mode
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6191
The previous change to split the worker thread start out of fdc_attach()
did not start the worker thread if the fdc device in the ACPI namespace
did not have an _FDE method. This fixes hangs when booting with a
floppy controller enabled on certain machines with ACPI.
Tested by: joel
Two new functions are provided, bit_ffs_at() and bit_ffc_at(), which allow
for efficient searching of set or cleared bits starting from any bit offset
within the bit string.
Performance is improved by operating on longs instead of bytes and using
ffsl() for searches within a long. ffsl() is a compiler builtin in both
clang and gcc for most architectures, converting what was a brute force
while loop search into a couple of instructions.
All of the bitstring(3) API continues to be contained in the header file.
Some of the functions are large enough that perhaps they should be uninlined
and moved to a library, but that is beyond the scope of this commit.
sys/sys/bitstring.h:
Convert the majority of the existing bit string implementation from
macros to inline functions.
Properly protect the implementation from inadvertant macro expansion
when included in a user's program by prefixing all private
macros/functions and local variables with '_'.
Add bit_ffs_at() and bit_ffc_at(). Implement bit_ffs() and
bit_ffc() in terms of their "at" counterparts.
Provide a kernel implementation of bit_alloc(), making the full API
usable in the kernel.
Improve code documenation.
share/man/man3/bitstring.3:
Add pre-exisiting API bit_ffc() to the synopsis.
Document new APIs.
Document the initialization state of the bit strings
allocated/declared by bit_alloc() and bit_decl().
Correct documentation for bitstr_size(). The original code comments
indicate the size is in bytes, not "elements of bitstr_t". The new
implementation follows this lead. Only hastd assumed "elements"
rather than bytes and it has been corrected.
etc/mtree/BSD.tests.dist:
tests/sys/Makefile:
tests/sys/sys/Makefile:
tests/sys/sys/bitstring.c:
Add tests for all existing and new functionality.
include/bitstring.h
Include all headers needed by sys/bitstring.h
lib/libbluetooth/bluetooth.h:
usr.sbin/bluetooth/hccontrol/le.c:
Include bitstring.h instead of sys/bitstring.h.
sbin/hastd/activemap.c:
Correct usage of bitstr_size().
sys/dev/xen/blkback/blkback.c
Use new bit_alloc.
sys/kern/subr_unit.c:
Remove hard-coded assumption that sizeof(bitstr_t) is 1. Get rid of
unrb.busy, which caches the number of bits set in unrb.map. When
INVARIANTS are disabled, nothing needs to know that information.
callapse_unr can be adapted to use bit_ffs and bit_ffc instead.
Eliminating unrb.busy saves memory, simplifies the code, and
provides a slight speedup when INVARIANTS are disabled.
sys/net/flowtable.c:
Use the new kernel implementation of bit-alloc, instead of hacking
the old libc-dependent macro.
sys/sys/param.h
Update __FreeBSD_version to indicate availability of new API
Submitted by: gibbs, asomers
Reviewed by: gibbs, ngie
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6004
The Xen PV clock has a resolution of 1ns, so set the resolution to the
highest one that FreeBSD supports, which is 1us.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
* Add a debug print for the xmit completion status fields.
Yes, I like staring at a stream of DWORDS.
* Set the retrycnt to the number of full frame retries for now;
I'll figure out how to factor rts/cts failures into it when
I figure out what the difference is.
It's -1 because it's not "retries", it's "tries".
It now passes the youtube test.
Tested:
* BCM4312, STA mode
I noticed that it'd associate fine, but it'd quickly stop exchanging traffic.
Receive was okay, but transmit just failed.
Then I went "wlandebug +rate". I discovered it started at 36M OFDM, and then
quickly rose to 54M, which then showed 0% transmit success.
Then, I dug into how the completion path works. We are reading 'ack=0'
in the TX status side, so .. then I discovered we were only processing the
TX completion status /if/ ack=1. So, we'd only ever count successes;
we'd never count failures, and thus the rate control code thought
everything was a-ok.
We also have to set retrycnt to something non-zero so it indeed does
bring the rate down upon failure.
So:
* Delete the rate control completion code from the tx completion
routine, it's just duplicate and never worked. Putting it behind
'if (status->ack) was pointless.
* Move it to the PIO and DMA completion routines which actually
do free the node reference and mbuf. We know at that point
what the status is, so do it there.
* Fake a retrycnt of 1 for now, so we at least count failures.
Also:
* Start adding comments about weird stuff I find with rate selection.
In this instance, we shouldn't be selecting a fallback rate that
doesn't match the currently configured mode (11a, 11b, 11g, etc.)
This isn't perfect - AMRR does try 54mbit and takes a few packets
before it figures out it's a bad idea - but it's better than nothing.
This makes the bwn(4) driver actually useful for the first time since
I've tried using it - and that dates back to 2011. I've resisted
successfully until now.
Tested:
* Broadcom BCM4312 802.11b/g Wireless, STA mode
WLAN (chipid 0x4312 rev 15) PHY (analog 6 type 5 rev 1) RADIO (manuf 0x17f ver 0x2062 rev 2)
TODO:
* See if the fallback rate actually /is/ working
* Question my own sanity over touching this driver in the first place.
Falling back from 6MB OFDM to 5MB CCK (a) may not work well in the
11bg PHYs, (b) won't work at all if you're 11g only, and (c) plainly
won't work for the 11a PHY.
So, don't do that!
Tested:
* BCM4312 802.11b/g Wireless, STA mode
WLAN (chipid 0x4312 rev 15) PHY (analog 6 type 5 rev 1) RADIO (manuf 0x17f ver 0x2062 rev 2)
Save the value of the IOV control and page size registers and restore
them (along with the VF count) in pci_cfg_save/pci_cfg_restore. This
ensures ARI remains enabled if a PF driver resets itself during the
PCI_IOV_INIT callback. This might also properly restore SRIOV state
across suspend/resume.
Reviewed by: rstone, vangyzen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6192
While here, check if ARI was enabled by re-reading the config register
after writing it and return an error if the write fails.
Reviewed by: rstone, vangyzen
Add CRC/MOVECRC operations, as well as the TEST and STORE variants.
With these operations, a CRC32C can be computed over one or more
descriptors' source data. When the STORE operation is encountered, the
accumulated CRC32C is emitted to memory. A TEST operations triggers an
IOAT channel error if the accumulated CRC32C does not match one in
memory.
These operations are not exposed through any API yet.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The IOAT engine can only address the low 40 bits (1 TB) of physmem via
the 'next descriptor' pointer. Restrict acceptable range given to
bus_dma_tag_create to match.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
pci_remap_msix() can be used to alter the mapping of allocated
MSI-X vectors to the MSI-X table. The code had an off by one error
when adding the IRQ resources after performing a remap. This was
fatal for any vectors in the table that used the "last" valid IRQ as
those vectors were assigned a garbage IRQ value.
MFC after: 3 days
* Break out the 'g' phy code;
* Break out the debugging bits into a separate source file, since
some debugging prints are done in the phy code;
* Make some more chip methods in if_bwn.c public.
This brings the size of if_bwn.c down to 6,805 lines which is now
approaching managable.
This (and eventually migrating the other PHY code out) is in preparation
for adding the 11n PHY. No, the 11ac PHY (for the BCM4260 softmac part) isn't
yet open source, so we can't grow that. Yet.
This trims ~3,700 lines of code from if_bwn.c, bringing it down to a slightly
less crazy sounding 10,446 lines of code.
This patch adds support for restoring backlight after resume and adds models
Macbook3,1
MacbookAir5,1
MacbookAir5,2
It also incorporates fixes for bug #175260, bug #203610 and bug #203512
so those can be closed if this patch is applied.
PR: kern/209156
PR: kern/175260
PR: kern/203610
PR: kern/203512
Submitted by: Johannes Lundberg <johannes@brilliantservice.co.jp>
Implement several small improvements to the suspend/resume Xen sequence:
- Call the power_suspend_early event before stopping all processes.
- Stop all processes. This was done implicitly previously by putting all
the CPUs in a known IPI handler.
- Warm up the timecounter.
- Re-initialize the time of day register.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
bus_get_cpus() returns a specified set of CPUs for a device. It accepts
an enum for the second parameter that indicates the type of cpuset to
request. Currently two valus are supported:
- LOCAL_CPUS (on x86 this returns all the CPUs in the package closest to
the device when DEVICE_NUMA is enabled)
- INTR_CPUS (like LOCAL_CPUS but only returns 1 SMT thread for each core)
For systems that do not support NUMA (or if it is not enabled in the kernel
config), LOCAL_CPUS fails with EINVAL. INTR_CPUS is mapped to 'all_cpus'
by default. The idea is that INTR_CPUS should always return a valid set.
Device drivers which want to use per-CPU interrupts should start using
INTR_CPUS instead of simply assigning interrupts to all available CPUs.
In the future we may wish to add tunables to control the policy of
INTR_CPUS (e.g. should it be local-only or global, should it ignore
SMT threads or not).
The x86 nexus driver exposes the internal set of interrupt CPUs from the
the x86 interrupt code via INTR_CPUS.
The ACPI bus driver and PCI bridge drivers use _PXM to return a suitable
LOCAL_CPUS set when _PXM exists and DEVICE_NUMA is enabled. They also and
the global INTR_CPUS set from the nexus driver with the per-domain set from
_PXM to generate a local INTR_CPUS set for child devices.
Reviewed by: wblock (manpage)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5519
The current resolution of the Xen PV clock is too high, which causes an
adjustment of 5s to be applied to it. Reduce the resolution to be the same
as the RTC plus one, so it's always selected as the best source when
available on x86.
Also don't reset the clock on resume, it's pointless and discards any
previous adjustments.
Sponsoted by: Citrix Systems R&D
Dom0 should be able to set the host time. This is implemented by first
writing to the RTC (as would be done on bare metal), and then using the
XENPF_settime64 hypercall in order to force Xen to update the wallclock
shared page of all domains.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
With the removal of the usage of the VCPU_SSHOTTMR_future flag, now
all errors from xentimer_vcpu_start_timer should be considered fatal, and
the loop is no longer needed since in case of setting the timer in the past
we will get an event interrupt right away (instead of returning ETIME).
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
MFC after : 2 weeks
On slow platforms with unreliable TSC, such as QEMU emulated machines,
it is possible for the FreeBSD kernel to request the next event in the
past. In that case, in the current implementation of
xentimer_vcpu_start_timer, we simply return -ETIME. To be precise Xen
returns -ETIME and we pass it on. As a consequence we need to loop
around to function to make sure that the timer is properly set.
Instead it is better to always ask the hypervisor for a timer event,
even if the timeout is past. To do that, remove the VCPU_SSHOTTMR_future
flag.
Submitted by: Stefano Stabellini <sstabellini@kernel.org>
Reviewed by: royger
MFC after: 2 weeks
* break out the operating mode and rx filter into new functions, rather
than them being hard-coded
* if we're in sniffer mode or not associated, set the BSS MAC to all zero,
rather than relying on a chip reset to do it for us
* add comments about .. how interestingly buggy the chip is.
Tested:
* AR9170 + AR9102, STA+monitor mode
Obtained from: linux carl9170 (general chip workings, constant definitions)
Switch to add_channel / add_channel_ht40 + pass channel's TX power
for the last.
Tested by: dhw
Reviewed by: adrian
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6141
driver is (or behaves identically to) /dev/mem. Remove the D_MEM flag
from random drivers.
Note that currently the D_MEM flag does not affect any behaviour, but
this going to change in the next commit.
Noted and reviewed by: alc
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
X-Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6149
The Linux driver sets the rate_n_flags regardless of whether it's being
sent using firmware rate control or local rate control. This includes
the antenna configuration.
Thanks to Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu> for pointing this out to me
and doing some investigation/testing on his end.
Tested:
* Intel 7260 STA, 2G and 5G networks
I .. can't believe I missed this.
This showed up because the AP was TX'ing LDPC to an iwm(4) chipset,
which didn't advertise LDPC and doesn't /accept/ LDPC. Amusingly, all
the two other FreeBSD 11n parts I had tested with (AR9380, Intel 7260)
and I completely forgot to test on ye olde hardware.
That'll teach me.
Tested:
* AR9580 (AP) - Intel 7260 (STA), AR9380 (STA), Intel 6205 (STA)
function to error out early when no port module is present and doing
eeprom access. This also prevents error codes from filling up in
dmesg.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Tested by: Netflix
MFC after: 1 week
LDPC adds better transmit reliability if both ends support it.
You in theory can do both STBC and LDPC at the same time.
If I see issues I'll disable it.
* Only enable it if both ends of a connection negotiate it.
* Disable it if any rate is non-11n.
* Count both LDPC TX and STBC TX.
Tested:
* AR9380, STA mode
Arguably we should only be doing the probe/attach to children of
these devices as well.
Tested by: Michal Stanek <mst_semihalf.com> (arm64)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6133
Add new function gpio_alloc_intr_resource(), which allows an allocation
of interrupt resource associated to given gpio pin. It also allows to
specify interrupt configuration.
Note: This functionality is dependent on INTRNG, and must be
implemented in each GPIO controller.
Labels are limitted by 32 on EF10. It is not sufficient on powerful hosts.
Since only one RxQ is running over each EvQ, zero label may be used.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
PR: 208267
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6121
This allows the PCI-PCI bridge driver to save a reference to the child
device in its softc.
Note that this required moving the "pci" device creation out of
acpi_pcib_attach(). Instead, acpi_pcib_attach() is renamed to
acpi_pcib_fetch_prt() as it's sole action now is to fetch the PCI
interrupt routing table.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6021
Rescanning a PCI bus uses the following steps:
- Fetch the current set of child devices and save it in the 'devlist'
array.
- Allocate a parallel array 'unchanged' initalized with NULL pointers.
- Scan the bus checking each slot (and each function on slots with a
multifunction device).
- If a valid function is found, look for a matching device in the 'devlist'
array. If a device is found, save the pointer in the 'unchanged' array.
If a device is not found, add a new device.
- After the scan has finished, walk the 'devlist' array deleting any
devices that do not have a matching pointer in the 'unchanged' array.
- Finally, fetch an updated set of child devices and explicitly attach any
devices that are not present in the 'unchanged' array.
This builds on the previous changes to move subclass data management into
pci_alloc_devinfo(), pci_child_added(), and bus_child_deleted().
Subclasses of the PCI bus use custom rescan logic explicitly override the
rescan method to disable rescans.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6018
This greatly reduces the oqdrops under heavy workload.
For TCP send/recv test (10K concurrent connections):
oqdrops is reduced by 17% on sending side, and 57% on receiving side.
For nginx-1.8/wrk-4 1KB object test (10K concurrent connections,
4 requests/connection):
oqdrops is reduced by 44% on nginx side, and 10% on wrk side.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
- Factor out common part to zynq-7000.dtsi
- Fix problem with Zynq interrupts by using interrupt "triples"
in .dtsi file to differentiate between edge-triggered and
level-triggered interrupts
- cgem driver now recognizes "status" property
Submitted by: Thomas Skibo <thomasskibo@yahoo.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6095
The softc member 'ciss_logical' is an array of 'ciss_max_logical_bus' members.
Most of the time it is iterated correctly. This patch fixes the two instances
where the driver iterated off the end of the array.
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1305492
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
ism_stop() already destroys and frees 'sp', including a call to ic_destroy().
Don't dereference 'sp' after ism_stop() and don't invoke ic_destroy() on the
freed memory either.
Reported by: Coverity
CIDs: 1006109, 1304861
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division