Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Poul-Henning Kamp
07dd938303 Don't pass three args when one will do just fine, and even prevent
mistakes like the one brgphy.c (now corrected).
2002-04-28 19:25:07 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
83549c664b Improve an API by about 4 lines per driver. 2002-04-28 19:01:32 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
e51a25f850 Remove __P. 2002-03-20 02:08:01 +00:00
Jonathan Lemon
d9730b8b53 Cleanup pass for mii drivers.
. Make internal service routines static.
   . Use a consistent ordering of checks in MII_TICK.  Do the work in the
     mii_phy_tick() subroutine if appropriate.
   . Call mii_phy_update() to trigger the callbacks.
2001-09-29 19:18:52 +00:00
Bill Paul
34da0ef197 Grrrrr. That last commit was supposed to be to the head, not to -stable
(even though I want the fixes in -stable anyway). I'm sure I'm going
to get flamed now for committing to -stable and -current too quickly.
*sigh*
2000-12-12 19:31:14 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
3389ae9350 Remove ~25 unneeded #include <sys/conf.h>
Remove ~60 unneeded #include <sys/malloc.h>
2000-04-19 14:58:28 +00:00
Bill Paul
1ff33426c8 Re-arrange things in the attach routines of the 3Com and RealTek PHY
drivers so that we don't clobber things or leave them uninitialized
if we abort due a failure.

Submitted by:	Luoqi Chen
1999-09-01 17:07:27 +00:00
Bill Paul
24a7e3d3de The ASIC on the 3c905C appears to be manufactured by Broadcom (previous
ones were made by Lucent). The Broadcom chip also appears to use an
internal PHY made by Broadcom which uses the Broadcom OUI. This is different
from previous ASICs which always returned 0 in the PHY ID registers.
To account for this, I added the necessary ID values for the Broadcom
PHY so that it can be detected and attached using the 3Com PHY driver
instead of defaulting to the generic one.
1999-08-29 15:42:04 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c3aac50f28 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:08:13 +00:00
Bill Paul
d00275330d This commit adds support for the NetBSD MII abstraction layer and
MII-compliant PHY drivers. Many 10/100 ethernet NICs available today
either use an MII transceiver or have built-in transceivers that can
be programmed using an MII interface. It makes sense then to separate
this support out into common code instead of duplicating it in all
of the NIC drivers. The mii code also handles all of the media
detection, selection and reporting via the ifmedia interface.

This is basically the same code from NetBSD's /sys/dev/mii, except
it's been adapted to FreeBSD's bus architecture. The advantage to this
is that it automatically allows everything to be turned into a
loadable module. There are some common functions for use in drivers
once an miibus has been attached (mii_mediachg(), mii_pollstat(),
mii_tick()) as well as individual PHY drivers. There is also a
generic driver for all PHYs that aren't handled by a specific driver.
It's possible to do this because all 10/100 PHYs implement the same
general register set in addition to their vendor-specific register
sets, so for the most part you can use one driver for pretty much
any PHY. There are a couple of oddball exceptions though, hence
the need to have specific drivers.

There are two layers: the generic "miibus" layer and the PHY driver
layer. The drivers are child devices of "miibus" and the "miibus" is
a child of a given NIC driver. The "miibus" code and the PHY drivers
can actually be compiled and kldoaded as completely separate modules
or compiled together into one module. For the moment I'm using the
latter approach since the code is relatively small.

Currently there are only three PHY drivers here: the generic driver,
the built-in 3Com XL driver and the NS DP83840 driver. I'll be adding
others later as I convert various NIC drivers to use this code.

I realize that I'm cvs adding this stuff instead of importing it
onto a separate vendor branch, but in my opinion the import approach
doesn't really offer any significant advantage: I'm going to be
maintaining this stuff and writing my own PHY drivers one way or
the other.
1999-08-21 17:40:53 +00:00