This is what iwlwifi seems to do, and the previous behaviour triggered
firmware panics during transmit on a 9560.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Though we don't otherwise use firmware's offload capabilities, we need
to set this flag when the MAC header's size isn't a multiple of four.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Configure the scheduler only for the management queue.
- Fix a bug when enabling the schduler: the queues are specified using a
bitmask.
- Fix style in the area.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This is the multiqueue receive code required for 9000-series chips.
Note that we still only configure a single RX queue for now. Multiqueue
support will require MSI-X configuration and a scheme for managing a
global pool of RX buffers.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
For now iwm only ever uses queue 0 and the management queue, but my 9560
raises a software error interrupt during initialization if this flag is
not set. iwlwifi sets it for all 7000- and 8000-series hardware, so we
might as well do it unconditionally.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The firmware for 9000-series and newer devices has a different receive
API which supports multiple queues.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Match such chips using the device ID. We should really be checking the
subdevice as well, since a smaller number of 9460 and 9560 devices
actually belong to a new series of devices and require different
firmware, but that will require some extra logic in iwm_attach().
Submitted by: lwhsu, Guo Wen Jun <blockk2000@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Convert existing device family checks to avoid assuming that the device
family is always one of IWM_DEVICE_FAMILY_7000 or _8000.
Submitted by: lwhsu, Guo Wen Jun <blockk2000@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Only perform the call when a qfull bit transitions. While here, avoid
assignments in declarations in iwm_mvm_rx_tx_cmd().
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This ensures that the driver softc reflects device capabilities as early
as possible, for use by device initialization code that is conditional
on certain capabilities.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Also ensure that the htole* macros are applied correctly when specifying
the segment length and upper address bits. No functional change
intended (unless you use iwm(4) on a big-endian machine).
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Alter bsd.compat.mk to set MACHINE and MACHINE_ARCH when included
directly so MD paths in Makefiles work. In the process centralize
setting them in LIBCOMPATWMAKEENV.
Alter .PATH and CFLAGS settings in work when the Makefile is included.
While here only support LIB32 on supported platforms rather than always
enabling it and requiring users of MK_LIB32 to filter based
TARGET/MACHINE_ARCH.
The net effect of this change is to make Makefile.libcompat only build
compatability libraries.
Changes relative to r354449:
Correct detection of the compiler type when bsd.compat.mk is used
outside Makefile.libcompat. Previously it always matched the clang
case.
Set LDFLAGS including the linker emulation for mips where -m32 seems to
be insufficent.
Reviewed by: imp, kib (origional version in r354449)
Obtained from: CheriBSD (conceptually)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22251
This is a standard required property for interrupt controllers, and present
on the bcm_lintc nodes for currently supported RPi models. For the RPi4, we
have both bcm_lintc as well as GIC-400, but only one may be active at a
time.
Don't probe bcm_lintc if it's missing the "interrupt-controller" property --
in RPi 4 DTS, the bcm_lintc node is actually missing this along with other
required interrupt properties. Presumably, if the earlier boot stages will
support switching to the legacy interrupt controller (as is suggested
possible by the documentation), the DTS will need to be updated to indicate
the proper interrupt-parent and hopefully also mark this node as an
interrupt-controller instead.
handlers can be greatly simplified. All the previous double
cycling and complex locking was added to avoid these functions
holding global PCB locks for extended period of time, preventing
addition of new entries.
in the network epoch, we can greatly simplify synchronization.
Remove all unneccesary epoch enters hidden under INP_INFO_RLOCK macro.
Remove some unneccesary assertions and convert necessary ones into the
NET_EPOCH_ASSERT macro.
x86 stack_save_td_running() can work safely only if IPI_TRACE is a
non-maskable interrupt. But at the moment FreeBSD/Xen does not provide
support for the NMI delivery mode. So, mark the functionality as
unsupported similarly to other platforms without NMI.
Maybe there is a way to provide a Xen-specific working
stack_save_td_running(), but I couldn't figure it out.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Panzura
locking in udp_output() and udp6_output().
First, we select if we need read or write lock in PCB itself, we take
the lock and enter network epoch. Then, we proceed for the rest of
the function. In case if we need to modify PCB hash, we would take
write lock on it for a short piece of code.
We could exit the epoch before allocating an mbuf, but with this
patch we are keeping it all the way into ip_output()/ip6_output().
Today this creates an epoch recursion, since ip_output() enters epoch
itself. However, once all protocols are reviewed, ip_output() and
ip6_output() would require epoch instead of entering it.
Note: I'm not 100% sure that in udp6_output() the epoch is required.
We don't do PCB hash lookup for a bound socket. And all branches of
in6_select_src() don't require epoch, at least they lack assertions.
Today inet6 address list is protected by rmlock, although it is CKLIST.
AFAIU, the future plan is to protect it by network epoch. That would
require epoch in in6_select_src(). Anyway, in future ip6_output()
would require epoch, udp6_output() would need to enter it.
we lookup PCBs. Thus, do not enter epoch recursively in
in_pcblookup_hash() and in6_pcblookup_hash(). Same applies to
tcp_ctlinput() and tcp6_ctlinput().
This leaves several sysctl(9) handlers that return PCB credentials
unprotected. Add epoch enter/exit to all of them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22197
- amd_intr() does not account for the offset (0x200) in the counter
MSR address and ends up accessing invalid regions while reading
counter value after the 4th counter (0xC001000[8,9,..]) and
erroneously updates the counter values for counters [1-4].
- amd_intr() should only check core pmcs for interrupts since
other types of pmcs (L3,DF) cannot generate interrupts.
- fix pmc NMI's being ignored due to NMI latency on newer AMD processors
Note that this fixes a kernel panic due to GPFs accessing MSRs on
higher core count AMD cpus (seen on both Rome 7502P, and
Threadripper 2990WX 32-core CPUs)
Discussed with: markj
Submitted by: Shreyank Amartya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21553
[RISCV] Add Custom Parser for Atomic Memory Operands
Summary:
GCC Accepts both (reg) and 0(reg) for atomic instruction memory
operands. These instructions do not allow for an offset in their
encoding, so in the latter case, the 0 is silently dropped.
Due to how we have structured the RISCVAsmParser, the easiest way to
add support for parsing this offset is to add a custom AsmOperand and
parser. This parser drops all the parens, and just keeps the
register.
This commit also adds a custom printer for these operands, which
matches the GCC canonical printer, printing both `(a0)` and `0(a0)`
as `(a0)`.
Reviewers: asb, lewis-revill
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: s.egerton, hiraditya, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook,
apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, jrtc27, MaskRay,
zzheng, edward-jones, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o,
rkruppe, jfb, PkmX, jocewei, psnobl, benna, Jim, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65205
llvm-svn: 367553
Merge commit f596f4507 from llvm git (by Sam Elliott):
[RISCV] Add FreeBSD targets
Reviewers: asb
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: simoncook, s.egerton, lenary, psnobl, benna, mhorne,
emaste, kito-cheng, shiva0217, rogfer01, rkruppe, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57795
Patch by James Clarke (jrtc27)
llvm-svn: 367557
Merge commit f596f4507 from llvm git (by Hsiangkai Wang):
[DebugInfo] Generate fixups as emitting DWARF .debug_frame/.eh_frame.
It is necessary to generate fixups in .debug_frame or .eh_frame as
relaxation is enabled due to the address delta may be changed after
relaxation.
There is an opcode with 6-bits data in debug frame encoding. So, we
also need 6-bits fixup types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58335
llvm-svn: 366524
Merge commit f596f4507 from llvm git (by Hsiangkai Wang):
[DebugInfo] Some fields do not need relocations even relax is enabled.
In debug frame information, some fields, e.g., Length in CIE/FDE and
Offset in FDE are attributes to describe the structure of CIE/FDE.
They are not related to the relaxed code. However, these attributes
are symbol differences. So, in current design, these attributes will
be filled as zero and LLVM generates relocations for them.
We only need to generate relocations for symbols in executable
sections. So, if the symbols are not located in executable sections,
we still evaluate their values under relaxation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61584
llvm-svn: 366531
Merge commit f596f4507 from llvm git (by Alex Bradbury):
[RISCV] Don't force absolute FK_Data_X fixups to relocs
The current behavior of shouldForceRelocation forces relocations for
the majority of fixups when relaxation is enabled. This makes sense
for fixups which incorporate symbols but is unnecessary for simple
data fixups where the fixup target is already resolved to an absolute
value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63404
Patch by Edward Jones.
llvm-svn: 369257
Merge commit f596f4507 from llvm git (by Alex Bradbury):
[RISCV] Implement getExprForFDESymbol to ensure RISCV_32_PCREL is
used for the FDE location
Follow binutils in using RISCV_32_PCREL for the FDE initial location.
As explained in the relevant binutils commit
<a6cbf936e3>,
the ADD/SUB pair of relocations is problematic in the presence of
linker relaxation.
This patch has the same end goal as D64715 but includes test changes
and avoids adding a new global VariantKind to MCExpr.h (preferring
RISCVMCExpr VKs like the rest of the RISC-V backend).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66419
llvm-svn: 369375
This series of merges will permit riscv64 kernels and riscv64sf worlds
to build with clang instead of gcc (but still using the bfd linker).
Requested by: jhb
Obtained from: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/compare/master...bsdjhb:riscv_clang
MFC after: 1 month
X-MFC-With: r353358
GCC 4.2.1 is being removed before FreeBSD 13, as are some other
components required by FreeBSD/sparc64. Contemporary GCC does not build
and there is currently no indication that anyone is going to address
these issues.
PR: 228919, 233405, 236839, 239851