the implementation can guarantee forward progress in the event of
a stuck interrupt or interrupt storm. This is especially critical
for fast interrupt handlers, as they can cause a hard hang in that
case. When first called, arm_get_next_irq() is passed -1.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
registers contents.
- Use memory barriers to preserve the order of buffer space operations.
This might be needed if we'll ever use this driver on architectures
where ordering is not guaranteed.
operates in the common memory mode and use polling mode to control
the status of operations as I don't have any board with interrupt
line routed yet. I'll add the GPIO interrupt driven mode as soon
as I get one.
at91_udp.c does not exist anymore, it is now replaced by at91dci in
src/sys/dev/usb/controller. Also remove the ohci_atmelarm.c because it is also
included in src/sys/conf/files
Submitted by: Sylvestre Gallon
usb stack rather than with the rest of the processor support code.
Not sure that's a good idea, as we were moving away from it, but this
fixes the build in the mean time so we can have that discussion.
rather than a fixed 512... This fixes the mount root problem on at91.
Prior to the SD card reorg, all data transfers were 512 bytes, so we
didn't notice.
the serial port class when we set the devclass since it is now
no-longer a compile time constant. Eliminate the pci include, as it
isn't relevant or necessary.
time constant. This allows us to potentially change it at runtime or
autodetect it early in the boot (the latter being much more likely to
have a good outcome).
o Only set 4-bit caps on those boards that have 4-bit caps (this means that
because we don't set wire4 yet, this forces us to always use 1-bit bus).
o Don't test wire4 when setting up the bus width, since bad things will
happen if we do.
# This likely won't fix the busted at91 sd card support, but these are
# needful changes for correctness.
contents.
- It is possible to override the dynamic configuration by using
AT91C_MAIN_CLOCK option in kernel config.
PR: arm/128961 (based on)
Submitted by: Bjorn Konig <bkoenig@alpha-tierchen.de>
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: kib (mentor, implicit)
o Copy kb920x_machdep.c to at91_machdep.c
o Move board_init to new board_kb920x.c
o rename ramsize to at91_ramsize and make it accessible to board_* files.
o Delete files.kb920x. We can do this selection with the new boards.
o Add a stub for the tsc4370 board init, which will be added in
a future commit.
o Add new 'devices' at91_board_kb920x and at91_board_tsc4370. More are
needed and will be added in future commits.
Reviewed by: stass, cognet
sdhci supports up to 65535 blocks transfers, at91_mci - one block.
Enable multiblock operations disabled before to follow at91_mci driver
limitations.
Reviewed by: imp@
driver will need more serious help to work with an interrupt driven
path. There's many subtleties in driving the DMA engine with
interrupts in many configurations. Best to not "guess" what the right
way would be and mislead people.
memory allocation. It was change to include the range in the normal
memory area, so these ifdef'd out special cases are no longer useful
to keep around.
first one. U-boot, for example, uses the second register to store
MAC.[1]
- Use random MAC address if none configured instead of failing.
Submitted by: Bjorn Konig <bkoenig@alpha-tierchen.de> [1]
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: kib (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
place to add this connection, since the interrupt is for a GPIO pin,
but since we have no alternative at the moment...
Submitted by: Hans Petter Selasky
- Just grab Giant in the ixp425_iic(4) driver since this driver uses
a shared address/data register window pair to access the actual
I2C registers. None of the other ixp425 drivers lock access to these
shared address/data registers yet and that would need to be done before
this could use any meaningful locking.
- Add locking to the interrupt handler and 'iicbus_reset' methods of the
at91_twi(4) driver.
- Add locking to the pcf(4) driver. Other pcf(4) fixes include:
- Don't needlessly zero the softc.
- Use bus_foo rather than bus_space_foo and remove bus space tag and
handle from softc.
- The lpbb(4) driver just grabs Giant for now. This will be refined later
when ppbus(4) is locked.
- As was done with smbus earlier, move the DRIVER_MODULE() lines to match
the bus driver (either iicbus or iicbb) to the bridge driver into the
bridge drivers.
Tested by: sam (arm/ixp425)
As of r178766 this driver didn't compile anymore, because it missed a
switch()-statement. I'm getting tired of seeing this driver being broken
for two months already. When I run `make universe', everything passes,
except the BWCT kernel configuration file.
ALT_BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER. In addition to "Enter ~ ctrl-B" (to enter the
debugger), there is now "Enter ~ ctrl-P" (force panic) and
"Enter ~ ctrl-R" (request clean reboot, ala ctrl-alt-del on syscons).
We've used variations of this at work. The force panic sequence is
best used with KDB_UNATTENDED for when you just want it to dump and
get on with it.
The reboot request is a safer way of getting into single user than
a power cycle. eg: you've hosed the ability to log in (pam, rtld, etc).
It gives init the reboot signal, which causes an orderly reboot.
I've taken my best guess at what the !x86 and non-sio code changes
should be.
This also makes sio release its spinlock before calling KDB/DDB.
interrupt. So, add a new function pointer, arm_post_filter, which defaults
to NULL, and which will be used as the post_filter arg for
intr_event_create(). Set it properly for the AT91, so that it boots again.
Reported by: hps
- Pull all the code to deal with the trampoline stuff into one
centeralized place and use it from everywhere.
- Some minor style tidiness
Reviewed by: tinguely
for that argument. This will allow DDB to detect the broad category of
reason why the debugger has been entered, which it can use for the
purposes of deciding which DDB script to run.
Assign approximate why values to all current consumers of the
kdb_enter() interface.
silent NULL pointer dereference in the i386 and sparc64 pmap_pinit()
when the kmem_alloc_nofault() failed to allocate address space. Both
functions now return error instead of panicing or dereferencing NULL.
As consequence, vmspace_exec() and vmspace_unshare() returns the errno
int. struct vmspace arg was added to vm_forkproc() to avoid dealing
with failed allocation when most of the fork1() job is already done.
The kernel stack for the thread is now set up in the thread_alloc(),
that itself may return NULL. Also, allocation of the first process
thread is performed in the fork1() to properly deal with stack
allocation failure. proc_linkup() is separated into proc_linkup()
called from fork1(), and proc_linkup0(), that is used to set up the
kernel process (was known as swapper).
In collaboration with: Peter Holm
Reviewed by: jhb
in the same order as it's set in ate_set_mac.
I remember a discussion about this on -arm, but apparently nothing was done.
Warner, is this wrong ?
X-MFC After: proper review
7 months. You must have JP6 in the 1-2 position to supply power to the
USB devices, but I've used uftdi, uplcom and umass successfully. If you
have it in 2-3, then nothing will show up. Also, if you have the FQPA
packaging for the AT91RM9200 (like the KN9202 boards have), you will get
the following message
uhub0: device problem (IOERROR), disabling port 2
due to a hardware erratum. It is safe to ignore as it is about pins that
aren't brought out on the FQPA package and aren't proeprly terminated either.
Alas, there's no register to read to tell the FQPA from the BGA versions.
Submitted by: Daan Vreeken
Approved by: re (kensmith)
it obtained through the uart_class structure. This allows us
to declare the uart_class structure as weak and as such allows
us to reference it even when it's not compiled-in.
It also allows is to get the uart_ops structure by name, which
makes it possible to implement the dt tag handling in uart_getenv().
The side-effect of all this is that we're using the uart_class
structure more consistently which means that we now also have
access to the size of the bus space block needed by the hardware
when we map the bus space, eliminating any hardcoding.
watchdog might hide the succesful arming of an earlier one. Accept that on
failing to arm any watchdog (because of non-supported timeouts) EOPNOTSUPP is
returned instead of the more appropriate EINVAL.
MFC after: 3 days
robustness of IIC transactions when parts aren't present. This also
removes a bunch of debug. This also moves this driver to 7-1
addressing rather than 6-0 addressing, which is more inline with all
the other iic drivers in the tree. I've tested this for about a
million years on the systems at work.
that can be used to check whether receive data is ready, i.e. whether
the subsequent call of uart_poll() should return a char, and unlike
uart_poll() doesn't actually receive data.
- Remove the device-specific implementations of uart_poll() and implement
uart_poll() in terms of uart_getc() and the newly added uart_rxready()
in order to minimize code duplication.
- In sunkbd(4) take advantage of uart_rxready() and use it to implement
the polled mode part of sunkbd_check() so we don't need to buffer a
potentially read char in the softc.
- Fix some mis-indentation in sunkbd_read_char().
Discussed with: marcel
behave as expected.
Also:
- Return an error if WD_PASSIVE is passed in to the ioctl as only
WD_ACTIVE is implemented at the moment. See sys/watchdog.h for an
explanation of the difference between WD_ACTIVE and WD_PASSIVE.
- Remove the I_HAVE_TOTALLY_LOST_MY_SENSE_OF_HUMOR define. If you've
lost your sense of humor, than don't add a define.
Specific changes:
i80321_wdog.c
Don't roll your own passive watchdog tickle as this would defeat the
purpose of an active (userland) watchdog tickle.
ichwd.c / ipmi.c:
WD_ACTIVE means active patting of the watchdog by a userland process,
not whether the watchdog is active. See sys/watchdog.h.
kern_clock.c:
(software watchdog) Remove a check for WD_ACTIVE as this does not make
sense here. This reverts r1.181.
Make part of John Birrell's KSE patch permanent..
Specifically, remove:
Any reference of the ksegrp structure. This feature was
never fully utilised and made things overly complicated.
All code in the scheduler that tried to make threaded programs
fair to unthreaded programs. Libpthread processes will already
do this to some extent and libthr processes already disable it.
Also:
Since this makes such a big change to the scheduler(s), take the opportunity
to rename some structures and elements that had to be moved anyhow.
This makes the code a lot more readable.
The ULE scheduler compiles again but I have no idea if it works.
The 4bsd scheduler still reqires a little cleaning and some functions that now do
ALMOST nothing will go away, but I thought I'd do that as a separate commit.
Tested by David Xu, and Dan Eischen using libthr and libpthread.
Remove a lot of older cruft not needed.
Improve ISR support, but it is still unused since polling is faster
Properly initalize the speed register to get 90kb/s, not 400b/s.
Try to catch NACK
Allow 0 length read transfers to generate start/top pairs.
o Don't delay when checking the done bits. There's no gain other
than a small performance hit.
o calculate the clock divisors better (things are still way slow,
so maybe there's more here?)
o don't always fail reset. Always succeed instead.
o fix inverted logic around at91_twi_wait() return value
o remove debug code
o remove unneeded, unworking junk
o Fix the packet statistics
o Make sure we set the FD bit when in full duplex
o Improve TX side efficency by eliminating a data copy for
unfragmented mbufs (the hardware can't do s/g).
o Minor busdma pedantry
o better comments in some places, more XXX in others
o Minor style nits.
This solves a problem I was seeing where I'd get no ethernet when not
booting with a NFS root. Well, unless I unplugged the cable and
plugged it back in first so I'd get the same up down up messages I get
for NFS root...
Thanks to sam and scottl for suggestions on making this driver more
efficient through better use of approrpiate APIs.
This interface also appears in the AT91SAM9260 and '61 as well as the
AVR32 based micros from Atmel. We don't yet support write protect or
hot-swap in this bridge driver.
whole the physical memory, cached, using 1MB section mappings. This reduces
the address space available for user processes a bit, but given the amount of
memory a typical arm machine has, it is not (yet) a big issue.
It then provides a uma_small_alloc() that works as it does for architectures
which have a direct mapping.
The core uart code expects the receive method to actually puts the
characters read into its buffers. For AT91, it's done in the ipend routine,
so also check if we have the alternate break sequence here.
MFC after: 3 days
Introduce framework to configure the multiplexed pins on boot.
Since the USART supprots RS-485 multidrop mode, it allows the
TX pins to float. However, for RS-232 operations, we don't
want these pins to float. Instead, they should be pulled up
to avoid mismatches. Linux does something similar when it
configures the TX lines. This implies that we also allow the
RX lines to float rather than be in the state they are left in
by the boot loader. Since they are input pins, I think that
this is the right thing to do.
Plus minor for our board.
address is in the userland address space. The proper thing is either to choose
a virtual address in the kernel address space beyond the KVA, or to use
pmap_mapdev().
Make serial ports more robust and reliable. Make non-console ports
work. This might have broken skyeye stuff.
o Introduce ping-pong receive buffers.
o Use DMA to copy characters directly into memory.
o Support baud rates other than 115200
o Use 1 stop bit when 1 stop bit is requested (otherwise 2 were used,
which caused dropped characters when received in bursts).
o Use 1.5 stop bits for 5-bit bytes, and 2 stop bits otherwise when 2
stop bits were requested.
o Actually update line parameters.
o Fix comments
o Move init into attach
o Tweaks to TX interrupt registers to get them reliable and non-storming.
o harvest data in ipend since the latency between it and the callback
was too long. This likely is how it should be, I don't know why I deferred
things to the callback before.
o disable all interrupts in console init. We don't want interrupts until
we turn on an ISR.
o cosmetic tweaks
o Automatically detect of the TIMEOUT interrupt is supported. If so, use
it so we get better CPU utilization. Otherwise do a character at a time
RX. Good news here is that it seems we have enough CPU and low enough
fast interrupt latency to do this reliably.
o Don't read USART_CR. It is a write-only register.
o start to implement bus_ioctl. Do BAUD now...
number of banks, rows and columns the SDRAMC is programmed to access
to determine the RAM size for the board, rather than hard-wiring it to
be 32MB. My company's board with 64MB now probes correctly, as does
the KB9202 with only 32MB. This means that to detect the right memory
size, our boot loader must correctly initialize these values. This is
a fairly safe assumption because the boot loader has to initialize
SDRAM already, and it isn't really possible to change this register
after we've accessed SDRAM.
The boot loader is supposed to leave this bit set to the right value
for the board. If this bit was set at attach time, use it to init the
config register correctly.
Note: this means the boot loader has to properly initialize it.
Add a new option, SKYEYE_WORKAROUNDS, which as the name suggests adds
workarounds for things skyeye doesn't simulate. Specifically :
- Use USART0 instead of DBGU as the console, make it not use DMA, and manually provoke an interrupt when we're done in the transmit function.
- Skyeye maintains an internal counter for clock, but apparently there's
no way to access it, so hack the timecounter code to return a value which
is increased at every clock interrupts. This is gross, but I didn't find a
better way to implement timecounters without hacking Skyeye to get the
counter value.
- Force the write-back of PTEs once we're done writing them, even if they
are supposed to be write-through. I don't know why I have to do that.
the wire. This increases the speed considerably. Start to put
infrastructure in place to do RX side, but that requires more study
before it can be done.
Add bus attachment for the ohci device on this chip. The bus and hub
are detected correctly, but the children devices aren't detected
correctly for reasons unknown.
o update TODO list
o Better use of busdma
o mark RX dtors as COHERENT. This helps performance a lot by not requiring
so many EXPENSIVE cache flushes. The cost of accessing it non-cached
is much smaller.
o Copy data from Rx buffers to make IP header 4 byte aligned.
o CRC length included in reported length, so cope
o Don't free TX buffer twice
o Manage TX buffers better.
o Enable just the interrupts we want.
o Manage OACTIVE better
# Some of these done by cognet
# These changes let us get to # via NFS root.
o Add memory barrier to bus space
o Allow for up to 3 IRQs per device
o Move to table driven population of children devices.
o Add support for usb ohci memory mapped controller resource allocation.
o Clean up a bunch of extra writes to disable interrupts that are now
done elsewhere.
o Force all system interrupt handlers be fast. We get deadlock if they
aren't.
o Disable all interrupts that the ST can generate until we have an ISR
to service them.
o Correct clock calculation to make DELAY the right length...
Submitted by: cognet (#2)
hack where it assumes the first field of the driver softc is the struct
ifnet, and it copies its value in mii_phy_probe().
- In the interrupt handler, set the mbuf m_len field on packet receive.