shared code infrastructure that is family specific and
modular. There is also support for our latest gigabit
nic, the 82575 that is MSI/X and multiqueue capable.
The new shared code changes some interfaces to the core
code but testing at Intel has been going on for months,
it is fairly stable.
I have attempted to be careful in retaining any fixes that
CURRENT had and we did not, I apologize in advance if any
thing gets clobbered, I'm sure I'll hear about it :)
Approved by pdeuskar
The name trunk is misused as the networking term trunk means carrying multiple
VLANs over a single connection. The IEEE standard for link aggregation (802.3
section 3) does not talk about 'trunk' at all while it is used throughout IEEE
802.1Q in describing vlans.
The lagg(4) driver provides link aggregation, failover and fault tolerance.
Discussed on: current@
front-end if the dpt(4) module is built along with a kernel that
includes eisa(4) or when compiling it stand-alone (logic based on
the corresponding ISA logic in sys/modules/sound/sound/Makefile).
As as side-effect this fixes the stand-alone build of the dpt(4)
module after dpt.h 1.17, dpt_eisa.c 1.22 and dpt_scsi.c 1.55.
Breakage reported by: n_hibma
Linux SCSI SG passthrough device API. The intention is to allow for both
running of Linux apps that want to talk to /dev/sg* nodes, and to facilitate
porting of apps from Linux to FreeBSD. As such, both native and linuxolator
entry points and definitions are provided.
Caveats:
- This does not support the procfs and sysfs nodes that the Linux SG
driver provides. Some Linux apps may rely on these for operation,
others may only use them for informational purposes.
- More ioctls need to be implemented.
- Linux uses a naming scheme of "sg[a-z]" for devices, while FreeBSD uses a
scheme of "sg[0-9]". Devfs aliasis (symlinks) are automatically created
to link the two together. However, tools like camcontrol only see the
native names.
- Some operations were originally designed to return byte counts or other
data directly as the syscall return value. The linuxolator doesn't appear
to support this well, so this driver just punts for these cases.
Now that the driver is in place, others are welcome to add missing
functionality. Thanks to Roman Divacky for pushing this work along.
imitating an Ethernet device, so vlan(4) and if_bridge(4) can be
attached to it for testing and benchmarking purposes. Its source
can be an introduction to the anatomy of a network interface driver
due to its simplicity as well as to a bunch of comments in it.
o make all crypto drivers have a device_t; pseudo drivers like the s/w
crypto driver synthesize one
o change the api between the crypto subsystem and drivers to use kobj;
cryptodev_if.m defines this api
o use the fact that all crypto drivers now have a device_t to add support
for specifying which of several potential devices to use when doing
crypto operations
o add new ioctls that allow user apps to select a specific crypto device
to use (previous ioctls maintained for compatibility)
o overhaul crypto subsystem code to eliminate lots of cruft and hide
implementation details from drivers
o bring in numerous fixes from Michale Richardson/hifn; mostly for
795x parts
o add an optional mechanism for mmap'ing the hifn 795x public key h/w
to user space for use by openssl (not enabled by default)
o update crypto test tools to use new ioctl's and add cmd line options
to specify a device to use for tests
These changes will also enable much future work on improving the core
crypto subsystem; including proper load balancing and interposing code
between the core and drivers to dispatch small operations to the s/w
driver as appropriate.
These changes were instigated by the work of Michael Richardson.
Reviewed by: pjd
Approved by: re
uuencoded format along with their respective LICENSE files.
- Add new share/doc/legal directory to BSD.usr.dist mtree file. This is the
place we install LICENSE files for restricted firmwares.
- Teach firmware(9) and kmod.mk about licensed firmwares. Restricted firmwares
won't load properly unless legal.<name>.license_ack is set to 1, either
via kenv(1) or /boot/loader.conf.
Reviewed by: mlaier, sam
Permitted by: Intel (via Andrew Wilson)
MFC after: 1 month
arrangement that has no intrinsic internal knowledge of whether devices
it is given are truly multipath devices. As such, this is a simplistic
approach, but still a useful one.
The basic approach is to (at present- this will change soon) use camcontrol
to find likely identical devices and and label the trailing sector of the
first one. This label contains both a full UUID and a name. The name is
what is presented in /dev/multipath, but the UUID is used as a true
distinguishor at g_taste time, thus making sure we don't have chaos
on a shared SAN where everyone names their data multipath as "Fred".
The first of N identical devices (and N *may* be 1!) becomes the active
path until a BIO request is failed with EIO or ENXIO. When this occurs,
the active disk is ripped away and the next in a list is picked to
(retry and) continue with.
During g_taste events new disks that meet the match criteria for existing
multipath geoms get added to the tail end of the list.
Thus, this active/passive setup actually does work for devices which
go away and come back, as do (now) mpt(4) and isp(4) SAN based disks.
There is still a lot to do to improve this- like about 5 of the 12
recommendations I've received about it, but it's been functional enough
for a while that it deserves a broader test base.
Reviewed by: pjd
Sponsored by: IronPort Systems
MFC: 2 months
It is built in the same module as IPv4 multicast forwarding, i.e. ip_mroute.ko,
if and only if IPv6 support is enabled for loadable modules.
Export IPv6 forwarding structs to userland netstat(1) via sysctl(9).
This should fix the run time bustage observed on recent -CURRENT whilst
mounting a MSDOS filesystem with non-default locale/code page:
link_elf: symbol msdosfs_fileno_free undefined
KLD msdosfs_iconv.ko: depends on msdosfs - not available
configured and that in turn controls the descriptor layout; the rate
control module has no business peeking inside the descriptor but until
we can change the api so the driver records the tx rates and passes
them deal with it
These are shared-memory variants based on Am79C90-compatible chips
that apart from the missing DMA engine are similar to the 'ledma'
variant including using a (pseudo-)bus/device for the buffer that
the actual LANCE device hangs off from. The performance of these is
close to that of the 'ledma' one, like expected at a few times the
CPU load though.
recording enabled some programs (audio/audacity from ports) can't
correctly enumerate all /dev/dsp device.
Note: previous commit did not enable some debugging stuff, my eyes did
misread "#undef" as "#define".
Submitted by: Yuriy Tsibizov <Yuriy.Tsibizov@gfk.ru>
---snip---
New features:
1. Optional multichannel recording (32 channels on Live!, 64 channels
on Audigy).
All channels are 16bit/48000Hz/mono, format is fixed.
Half of them are copied from sound output, another half can be
used to record any data from DSP. What should be recorded is
hardcoded in DSP code. In this version it records dummy data, but
can be used to record all DSP inputs, for example..
Because there are no support of more-than-stereo sound streams
multichannell stream is presented as one 32(64)*48000 Hz 16bit mono
stream.
Channel map:
SB Live! (4.0/5.1)
offset (words) substream
0x00 Front L
0x01 Front R
0x02 Digital Front L
0x03 Digital Front R
0x04 Digital Center
0x05 Digital Sub
0x06 Headphones L
0x07 Headphones R
0x08 Rear L
0x09 Rear R
0x0A ADC (multi-rate recording) L
0x0B ADC (multi-rate recording) R
0x0C unused
0x0D unused
0x0E unused
0x0F unused
0x10 Analog Center (Live! 5.1) / dummy (Live! 4.0)
0x11 Analog Sub (Live! 5.1) / dummy (Live! 4.0)
0x12..-0x1F dummy
Audigy / Audigy 2 / Audigy 2 Value / Audigy 4
offset (words) substream
0x00 Digital Front L
0x01 Digital Front R
0x02 Digital Center
0x03 Digital Sub
0x04 Digital Side L (7.1 cards) / Headphones L (5.1 cards)
0x05 Digital Side R (7.1 cards) / Headphones R (5.1 cards)
0x06 Digital Rear L
0x07 Digital Rear R
0x08 Front L
0x09 Front R
0x0A Center
0x0B Sub
0x0C Side L
0x0D Side R
0x0E Rear L
0x0F Rear R
0x10 output to AC97 input L (muted)
0x11 output to AC97 input R (muted)
0x12 unused
0x13 unused
0x14 unused
0x15 unused
0x16 ADC (multi-rate recording) L
0x17 ADC (multi-rate recording) R
0x18 unused
0x19 unused
0x1A unused
0x1B unused
0x1C unused
0x1D unused
0x1E unused
0x1F unused
0x20..0x3F dummy
Fixes:
1. Do not assign negative values to variables used to index emu_cards
array. This array was never accessed when index is negative, but
Alexander (netchild@) told me that Coverity does not like it.
After this change emu_cards[0] should never be used to identify
valid sound card.
2. Fix off-by-one errors in interrupt manager. Add more checks there.
3. Fixes to sound buffering code now allows driver to use large playback
buffers.
4. Fix memory allocation bug when multichannel recording is not
enabled.
5. Fix interrupt timeout when recording with low bitrate (8kHz).
Hardware:
1. Add one more known Audigy ZS card to list. Add two cards with
PCI IDs betwen old known cards and new one.
Other changes:
1. Do not use ALL CAPS in messages.
Incomplete code:
1. Automute S/PDIF when S/PDIF signal is lost.
Tested on i386 only, gcc 3.4.6 & gcc41/gcc42 (syntax only).
---snip---
This commits enables a little bit of debugging output when the driver is
loaded as a module. I did a cross-build test for amd64.
The code has some style issues, this will be addressed later.
The multichannel recording part is some work in progress to allow playing
around with it until the generic sound code is better able to handle
multichannel streams.
This is supposed to fix
CID: 171187
Found by: Coverity Prevent
Submitted by: Yuriy Tsibizov <Yuriy.Tsibizov@gfk.ru>