Commit Graph

13115 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Scott Long
f1c579b1ec Add the Areca SATA RAID driver (arcmsr). This supports the ARC-11xx and 12xx
series of controllers.  Areca provides a CLI and HTTP management tool for
FreeBSD/i386 and FreeBSD/amd64 on their website.  Many thanks to Areca for
their support of FreeBSD.  Thanks also to Mike Tansca and Sentex Communications
for donating hardware.

Obtained from: Erich Chen <erich at areca com tw>
2005-03-31 18:19:55 +00:00
Scott Long
69bbb4fe70 If resource allocation fails, we could wind up freeing the cdev without it
being allocated.  Add a simple check for this.

Submitted by: yongari
2005-03-31 17:16:40 +00:00
Sam Leffler
fe234894e5 reclaim mbufs in failure cases
Submitted by:	Tai-hwa Liang
2005-03-31 16:39:18 +00:00
Søren Schmidt
5a5b148dd8 Change the ata_* methods to use a channel device instead of a
controller device. This helps when there is no controller parent
to a channel (PPC port).
2005-03-31 15:05:40 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
f4f6abcb4e Explicitly hold a reference to the cdev we have just cloned. This
closes the race where the cdev was reclaimed before it ever made it
back to devfs lookup.
2005-03-31 12:19:44 +00:00
Søren Schmidt
0da27c6206 Correct the PCI ID for the SiS 965, and add support for the SATA part
that was left our by accident.

Prodded by:	Patrik Backlund
2005-03-31 06:25:14 +00:00
Sam Leffler
6e3a31bd67 check copyin return value (and while we're at it copyout too)
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-31 05:15:27 +00:00
Sam Leffler
5587897d92 remove useless ptr check; cur_column can never be null
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-31 05:00:31 +00:00
Sam Leffler
fd1700dc03 handle potential null ptr
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-31 04:58:10 +00:00
Sam Leffler
a8d7e0f6ab close unlikely race
Submitted by:	Michael Wong
2005-03-30 20:30:48 +00:00
Sam Leffler
a7073e8b96 correct comment 2005-03-30 20:29:02 +00:00
Sam Leffler
43e9cf7c9e o fix bug where rate wouldn't lift off lowest setting when operating as
an ap in 11g with protection enabled
o correct rate selection when operating in 11g with protection when no
  packets have been sent yet (from John Bicket)
o track api change to get first descriptor and use it to collect the frame
  length for calculating the state bin
o add more debugging and shuffle some existing debugging to give more info
o bump version to distinguish bug fixes
2005-03-30 20:20:49 +00:00
Sam Leffler
22233301a3 rev rate control api to pass the both the first+last tx descriptors
to the rate control module for tx complete processing; this enables
rate control algorithms to extract the packet length for xmits that
require multiple descriptors
2005-03-30 20:17:18 +00:00
Sam Leffler
c4c3cb462d o extend cts to cover packet burst when operating in 11g w/ protection
o check current channel parameters, not shadow state, for acm policy
  on data frames
2005-03-30 20:13:08 +00:00
Philip Paeps
4d2743aec5 Use a taskqueue for led-handling to prevent a potential panic.
Submitted by:	pjd
2005-03-30 15:06:11 +00:00
Søren Schmidt
d9e96e03ee Whoops, this got left out from the megacommit 2005-03-30 12:27:34 +00:00
Søren Schmidt
8ca4df3299 This is the much rumoured ATA mkIII update that I've been working on.
o       ATA is now fully newbus'd and split into modules.
        This means that on a modern system you just load "atapci and ata"
        to get the base support, and then one or more of the device
        subdrivers "atadisk atapicd atapifd atapist ataraid".
        All can be loaded/unloaded anytime, but for obvious reasons you
        dont want to unload atadisk when you have mounted filesystems.

o       The device identify part of the probe has been rewritten to fix
        the problems with odd devices the old had, and to try to remove
        so of the long delays some HW could provoke. Also probing is done
	without the need for interrupts, making earlier probing possible.

o       SATA devices can be hot inserted/removed and devices will be created/
        removed in /dev accordingly.
	NOTE: only supported on controllers that has this feature:
	Promise and Silicon Image for now.
	On other controllers the usual atacontrol detach/attach dance is
	still needed.

o	Support for "atomic" composite ATA requests used for RAID.

o       ATA RAID support has been rewritten and and now supports these
        metadata formats:
                 "Adaptec HostRAID"
                 "Highpoint V2 RocketRAID"
                 "Highpoint V3 RocketRAID"
                 "Intel MatrixRAID"
                 "Integrated Technology Express"
                 "LSILogic V2 MegaRAID"
                 "LSILogic V3 MegaRAID"
                 "Promise FastTrak"
                 "Silicon Image Medley"
		 "FreeBSD PseudoRAID"

o       Update the ioctl API to match new RAID levels etc.

o       Update atacontrol to know about the new RAID levels etc
        NOTE: you need to recompile atacontrol with the new sys/ata.h,
        make world will take care of that.
	NOTE2: that rebuild is done differently from the old system as
	the rebuild is now done piggybacked on read requests to the
	array, so atacontrol simply starts a background "dd" to rebuild
	the array.

o       The reinit code has been worked over to be much more robust.

o       The timeout code has been overhauled for races.

o	Support of new chipsets.

o       Lots of fixes for bugs found while doing the modulerization and
        reviewing the old code.

Missing or changed features from current ATA:

o       atapi-cd no longer has support for ATAPI changers. Todays its
        much cheaper and alot faster to copy those CD images to disk
        and serve them from there. Besides they dont seem to be made
        anymore, maybe for that exact reason.

o       ATA RAID can only read metadata from all the above metadata formats,
	not write all of them (Promise and Highpoint V2 so far). This means
	that arrays can be picked up from the BIOS, but they cannot be
	created from FreeBSD. There is more to it than just the missing
	write metadata support, those formats are not unique to a given
	controller like Promise and Highpoint formats, instead they exist
	for several types, and even worse, some controllers can have
	different formats and its impossible to tell which one.
	The outcome is that we cannot reliably create the metadata of those
	formats and be sure the controller BIOS will understand it.
	However write support is needed to update/fail/rebuild the arrays
	properly so it sits fairly high on the TODO list.

o       So far atapicam is not supported with these changes. When/if this
	will change is up to the maintainer of atapi-cam so go there for
	questions.

HW donated by:  Webveveriet AS
HW donated by:  Frode Nordahl
HW donated by:  Yahoo!
HW donated by:  Sentex
Patience by:	Vife and my boys (and even the cats)
2005-03-30 12:03:40 +00:00
Ian Dowse
04d114aa99 Use the usb_callout_* API instead of timeout()/untimeout() in order
to avoid a race condition that can cause the ukbd timeout routine
to run after the keyboard has detached.

Reported and tested by:	wpaul
2005-03-30 08:32:41 +00:00
Tai-hwa Liang
33d7d80c82 Fixing kernel build on amd64 machines.
Reviewed by:	sam (mentor)
2005-03-30 02:33:33 +00:00
Sam Leffler
03ed599a2a extend the timestamp from the rx descriptor to calculate the tsf to
use when checking for an ibss merge
2005-03-29 22:16:49 +00:00
Sam Leffler
019b966921 forgot to merge this bit from p4 2005-03-29 21:06:28 +00:00
Sam Leffler
f0fd5e07bb sync rates for any associated stations or neighbors on state transition 2005-03-29 21:00:50 +00:00
Sam Leffler
b467935a06 simplify callback 2005-03-29 20:59:49 +00:00
Sam Leffler
99d258fdc5 replace m_defrag with something more suitable 2005-03-29 20:54:31 +00:00
Mark Murray
3a0323d92f Revert to the more correct array size, and correct a KASSERT to
only allow proper values. ENTROPYSOURCE is a maxval+1, not an
allowable number.

Suggested loose protons in the solution:	phk
Prefers to keep the pH close to seven:		markm
2005-03-29 11:08:45 +00:00
Warner Losh
52baed478a There's really no need to have this be #ifdef PC98, so remove one more
of them from the tree.
2005-03-29 09:22:40 +00:00
Sam Leffler
72bd2eaecb plug resource leak
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-29 01:46:25 +00:00
Sam Leffler
b083b7c98d fix potential null ptr deref
Submitted by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-29 01:44:59 +00:00
Sam Leffler
14d15addab handle ciss_lookup failure
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-29 01:44:17 +00:00
Bill Paul
00df63a690 Remove the last vestiges of the "wait for link down event" hack. 2005-03-28 21:48:15 +00:00
Sam Leffler
8f593c02c3 check copyin/copyout return values
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-28 17:52:12 +00:00
Sam Leffler
6c772336f0 fix null ptr deref when nge_newbuf is called with an existing mbuf
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-28 17:49:03 +00:00
Nate Lawson
ca2c69c8ef Clean up resources properly if acpi_perf fails to attach. First, change
acpi_bus_alloc_gas() to delete the resource it set if alloc fails.  Then,
change acpi_perf to delete the resource after releasing it if alloc fails.
This should make probe and attach both fully restartable if either fails.
2005-03-27 22:38:28 +00:00
Nate Lawson
b8a1664840 Serialize task queue by starting only one thread instead of three. This
may help with various interdependencies between subsystems.  More testing
is needed to understand what the underlying issues are here.

Tested by:	Juho Vuori
MFC after:	2 days
2005-03-27 21:30:33 +00:00
Maxime Henrion
2646bbdd60 Fix copy&paste error in my previous commit.
Spotted by:	ru
2005-03-27 17:22:41 +00:00
Warner Losh
ee051f83d5 Unbreak style(9) breakage from last commit. We try to avoid defining
variables in internal blocks.
Also, go ahead and fail if we can't load the firmware.  It should have
failed like this, but never did (firmware loads generally don't fail).
2005-03-27 17:04:47 +00:00
Maxime Henrion
18557a86ad Fix a bunch of bugs I came accross when looking at the ixgb(4) driver,
some of which are rather serious:
- Use the device sysctl tree instead of rolling our own.
- Don't create a bus_dmamap_t to pass to bus_dmamem_alloc(), it is
  bus_dmamem_alloc() that creates it itself.  The DMA map created
  by the driver was overwritten and its memory was leaked.
- Fix resource handling bugs in the error path of ixgb_dma_alloc().
- Don't use vtophys() to get the base address of the TX and RX rings
  when busdma already gave us the correct address to use!
- Remove now useless includes and the alpha_XXX_dmamap() hack.
- Don't initialize if_output to ether_output(), ether_ifattach() does
  it for us already.
- Add proper module dependencies on ether and pci.

Unfortunately, I'm not lucky enough to own an ixgb(4) card, nor a
machine with a bus where to plug it in and I couldn't find anyone able
to test these patches, so they are only build-tested and I won't MFC
them for 5.4-RELEASE.
2005-03-27 16:38:08 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
ded25de729 Unbreak LINT. 2005-03-27 15:57:42 +00:00
Ian Dowse
61c43c6d8d Don't defer the boot-time exploration of high-speed USB busses.
This ensures that we explore EHCI busses before their companion
controllers' busses, so that ports connected to full/low speed
devices will be properly routed to the companion controllers by the
time the OHCI/UHCI exploration occurs.
2005-03-27 15:31:23 +00:00
Bill Paul
e0c8c9460c Argh. PCI resource list became an STAILQ instead of an SLIST. Try to
deal with this while maintaining backards source compatibility with
stable.
2005-03-27 10:35:07 +00:00
Bill Paul
7c1968ad82 Finally bring an end to the great "make the Atheros NDIS driver
work on SMP" saga. After several weeks and much gnashing of teeth,
I have finally tracked down all the problems, despite their best
efforts to confound and annoy me.

Problem nunmber one: the Atheros windows driver is _NOT_ a de-serialized
miniport! It used to be that NDIS drivers relied on the NDIS library
itself for all their locking and serialization needs. Transmit packet
queues were all handled internally by NDIS, and all calls to
MiniportXXX() routines were guaranteed to be appropriately serialized.
This proved to be a performance problem however, and Microsoft
introduced de-serialized miniports with the NDIS 5.x spec. Microsoft
still supports serialized miniports, but recommends that all new drivers
written for Windows XP and later be deserialized. Apparently Atheros
wasn't listening when they said this.

This means (among other things) that we have to serialize calls to
MiniportSendPackets(). We also have to serialize calls to MiniportTimer()
that are triggered via the NdisMInitializeTimer() routine. It finally
dawned on me why NdisMInitializeTimer() takes a special
NDIS_MINIPORT_TIMER structure and a pointer to the miniport block:
the timer callback must be serialized, and it's only by saving the
miniport block handle that we can get access to the serialization
lock during the timer callback.

Problem number two: haunted hardware. The thing that was _really_
driving me absolutely bonkers for the longest time is that, for some
reason I couldn't understand, my test machine would occasionally freeze
or more frustratingly, reset completely. That's reset and in *pow!*
back to the BIOS startup. No panic, no crashdump, just a reset. This
appeared to happen most often when MiniportReset() was called. (As
to why MiniportReset() was being called, see problem three below.)
I thought maybe I had created some sort of horrible deadlock
condition in the process of adding the serialization, but after three
weeks, at least 6 different locking implementations and heroic efforts
to debug the spinlock code, the machine still kept resetting. Finally,
I started single stepping through the MiniportReset() routine in
the driver using the kernel debugger, and this ultimately led me to
the source of the problem.

One of the last things the Atheros MiniportReset() routine does is
call NdisReadPciSlotInformation() several times to inspect a portion
of the device's PCI config space. It reads the same chunk of config
space repeatedly, in rapid succession. Presumeably, it's polling
the hardware for some sort of event. The reset occurs partway through
this process. I discovered that when I single-stepped through this
portion of the routine, the reset didn't occur. So I inserted a 1
microsecond delay into the read loop in NdisReadPciSlotInformation().
Suddenly, the reset was gone!!

I'm still very puzzled by the whole thing. What I suspect is happening
is that reading the PCI config space so quickly is causing a severe
PCI bus error. My test system is a Sun w2100z dual Opteron system,
and the NIC is a miniPCI card mounted in a miniPCI-to-PCI carrier card,
plugged into a 100Mhz PCI slot. It's possible that this combination of
hardware causes a bus protocol violation in this scenario which leads
to a fatal machine check. This is pure speculation though. Really all I
know for sure is that inserting the delay makes the problem go away.
(To quote Homer Simpson: "I don't know how it works, but fire makes
it good!")

Problem number three: NdisAllocatePacket() needs to make sure to
initialize the npp_validcounts field in the 'private' section of
the NDIS_PACKET structure. The reason if_ndis was calling the
MiniportReset() routine in the first place is that packet transmits
were sometimes hanging. When sending a packet, an NDIS driver will
call NdisQueryPacket() to learn how many physical buffers the packet
resides in. NdisQueryPacket() is actually a macro, which traverses
the NDIS_BUFFER list attached to the NDIS_PACKET and stashes some
of the results in the 'private' section of the NDIS_PACKET. It also
sets the npp_validcounts field to TRUE To indicate that the results are
now valid. The problem is, now that if_ndis creates a pool of transmit
packets via NdisAllocatePacketPool(), it's important that each time
a new packet is allocated via NdisAllocatePacket() that validcounts
be initialized to FALSE. If it isn't, and a previously transmitted
NDIS_PACKET is pulled out of the pool, it may contain stale data
from a previous transmission which won't get updated by NdisQueryPacket().
This would cause the driver to miscompute the number of fragments
for a given packet, and botch the transmission.

Fixing these three problems seems to make the Atheros driver happy
on SMP, which hopefully means other serialized miniports will be
happy too.

And there was much rejoicing.

Other stuff fixed along the way:

- Modified ndis_thsuspend() to take a mutex as an argument. This
  allows KeWaitForSingleObject() and KeWaitForMultipleObjects() to
  avoid any possible race conditions with other routines that
  use the dispatcher lock.

- Fixed KeCancelTimer() so that it returns the correct value for
  'pending' according to the Microsoft documentation

- Modfied NdisGetSystemUpTime() to use ticks and hz rather than
  calling nanouptime(). Also added comment that this routine wraps
  after 49.7 days.

- Added macros for KeAcquireSpinLock()/KeReleaseSpinLock() to hide
  all the MSCALL() goop.

- For x86, KeAcquireSpinLockRaiseToDpc() needs to be a separate
  function. This is because it's supposed to be _stdcall on the x86
  arch, whereas KeAcquireSpinLock() is supposed to be _fastcall.
  On amd64, all routines use the same calling convention so we can
  just map KeAcquireSpinLockRaiseToDpc() directly to KfAcquireSpinLock()
  and it will work. (The _fastcall attribute is a no-op on amd64.)

- Implement and use IoInitializeDpcRequest() and IoRequestDpc() (they're
  just macros) and use them for interrupt handling. This allows us to
  move the ndis_intrtask() routine from if_ndis.c to kern_ndis.c.

- Fix the MmInitializeMdl() macro so that is uses sizeof(vm_offset_t)
  when computing mdl_size instead of uint32_t, so that it matches the
  MmSizeOfMdl() routine.

- Change a could of M_WAITOKs to M_NOWAITs in the unicode routines in
  subr_ndis.c.

- Use the dispatcher lock a little more consistently in subr_ntoskrnl.c.

- Get rid of the "wait for link event" hack in ndis_init(). Now that
  I fixed NdisReadPciSlotInformation(), it seems I don't need it anymore.
  This should fix the witness panic a couple of people have reported.

- Use MSCALL1() when calling the MiniportHangCheck() function in
  ndis_ticktask(). I accidentally missed this one when adding the
  wrapping for amd64.
2005-03-27 10:14:36 +00:00
Nate Lawson
43ce1c7762 If a device_add_child fails (i.e. low memory situation), be sure to free
the unused ivars also.

Submitted by:	pjd
Obtained from:	Coverity Prevent analysis
2005-03-27 03:37:43 +00:00
Sam Leffler
4a8bef25fe check copyin+copyout return values when processing TWA_IOCTL_GET_LOCK
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-27 00:29:37 +00:00
Sam Leffler
155fb57323 purge dead code
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-26 23:51:39 +00:00
Sam Leffler
f6ef5ddaa4 correct logic so we recognize timeout on alloc
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-26 23:43:54 +00:00
Sam Leffler
83888a7f30 purge dead code
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-26 23:37:54 +00:00
Sam Leffler
52c94c38dc deal with malloc failure when setting up the multicast filter
Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
2005-03-26 23:26:49 +00:00
Sam Leffler
af5691cdd5 handle malloc failure and sk_vpd_prodname potentially being null for
other reasons

Noticed by:	Coverity Prevent analysis tool
Reviewed by:	bz, jmg
2005-03-26 22:57:28 +00:00
John-Mark Gurney
1a82818b98 fix a copy/paste typo for scanner/gameport...
Spotted by:	Michal Mertl <mime@traveller.cz>
2005-03-26 22:17:48 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
23db907c0f Don't call mlx_free() i mlx_attach() in case of failure. Doing so
in mlx_attach_pci() is much cleaner.

Inspired by:	Coverity
2005-03-26 21:58:09 +00:00