* all
- s/__FUNCTION__/__func__/.
Submitted by: Stefan Farfeleder <stefan@fafoe.narf.at>
- Compatibility for RELENG_4 and DragonFly.
* firewire
- Timestamp just before queuing.
- Retry bus probe if it fails.
- Use device_printf() for debug message.
- Invalidiate CROM while update.
- Don't process minimum/invalid CROM.
* sbp
- Add ORB_SHORTAGE flag.
- Add sbp.tags tunable.
- Revive doorbell support. It's not enabled by default.
variable length, so we should not be trying to copy it into a fixed
length buffer, especially one on the stack. malloc() a buffer of the
right size and return a pointer to that instead.
Fixes a crash I discovered when testing whe a Cisco AP in infrastructure
mode, which returns several information elements that make the
ndis_wlan_bssid_ex structure larger than expected.
Because xfer->send.payload is a pointer to the buffer, '&' shouldn't be there.
Submitted by: John Weisgerber <weisgerberj@gsilumonics.com>
PR: misc/64623
(1 << 24) - 2 instead of 1 << 24, which it was obviously intended to
be). This fixes SBus isp(4)s on sparc64 machines.
Report and testing: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>
(NIC would claim to establish a link with an ad-hoc net but it couldn't
send/receive packets). It turns out that every time the checkforhang
handler was called by ndis_ticktask(), the driver would generate a new
media connect event. The NDIS spec says the checkforhang handler is
called "approximately every 2 seconds" but using exactly 2 seconds seems
too fast. Using 3 seconds makes it happy again, so we'll go with that
for now.
instead of bus_alloc_resource_any() to restore source compatibility
with 5.2-REL and 5.2.1-REL systems. bus_alloc_resource_any() doesn't
really do anything besides hide some of bus_alloc_resource()'s arguments
from us, and in my opinion this isn't worth breaking backwards
compatibility for people who want to use the NDISulator code on 5.2.x.
are actually layered on top of the KeTimer API in subr_ntoskrnl.c, just
as it is in Windows. This reduces code duplication and more closely
imitates the way things are done in Windows.
- Modify ndis_encode_parm() to deal with the case where we have
a registry key expressed as a hex value ("0x1") which is being
read via NdisReadConfiguration() as an int. Previously, we tried
to decode things like "0x1" with strtol() using a base of 10, which
would always yield 0. This is what was causing problems with the
Intel 2200BG Centrino 802.11g driver: the .inf file that comes
with it has a key called RadioEnable with a value of 0x1. We
incorrectly decoded this value to '0' when it was queried, hence
the driver thought we wanted the radio turned off.
- In if_ndis.c, most drivers don't accept NDIS_80211_AUTHMODE_AUTO,
but NDIS_80211_AUTHMODE_SHARED may not be right in some cases,
so for now always use NDIS_80211_AUTHMODE_OPEN.
NOTE: There is still one problem with the Intel 2200BG driver: it
happens that the kernel stack in Windows is larger than the kernel
stack in FreeBSD. The 2200BG driver sometimes eats up more than 2
pages of stack space, which can lead to a double fault panic.
For the moment, I got things to work by adding the following to
my kernel config file:
options KSTACK_PAGES=8
I'm pretty sure 8 is too big; I just picked this value out of a hat
as a test, and it happened to work, so I left it. 4 pages might be
enough. Unfortunately, I don't think you can dynamically give a
thread a larger stack, so I'm not sure how to handle this short of
putting a note in the man page about it and dealing with the flood
of mail from people who never read man pages.
only done minimal testing on one of these cards and the firmware folks
have been extremely uncooperative in answering my qeustions about them, so
hopefully they will work ok for everyone.
This completes the effort to handle dependent functions, which are used
in some machines for irq link resources. Also, clean up some nearby
comments while I'm at it.
This change has not been tested.
This change was triggered by a gcc(1) warning on ia64 at -O2. The
variable v was not used after being computed, which resulted in enough
dead code elimination (DCE) to confuse the compiler and emit a bogus
warning about the use of the variable i without prior definition. The
variable i is the loop variable.
Submitted by: des
Responsibility: marcel
to select a serial console and debug port (resp). On ia64 these replace
the use of hints completely and take precedence over hints on alpha,
amd64 and i386. On sparc64 these variables are not yet recognised.
The reasons for introducing these variables are:
1. Hints have side-effects. They reserve the unit number for use by
isa or acpi devices and therefore cannot be used to select a pci
device. Also, the use of a unit number to select a device prior
to bus enumeration is nonsense. The new variables have no side-
effects and are not based on unit numbers.
2. Hints don't have the expression power to allow the sysadmin to
select UARTs that are not legacy PC devices and need the support
of compile-time constants to give the sysadmin some level of
flexibility.
The hw.uart.console and hw.uart.dbgport variables specify a list of
attributes. An attribute is a tag-value pair, seperated by a colon.
Attributes are seperated by a comma. Where possible, tags are the
same as those in /etc/remote (only br and pa in practice). Details
can be found in the manpage (not part of this commit).
Not tested on: amd64, pc98
device, the device is probed multiple times (so each device is
detected N times after unloading/loading the module N-1 times).
The real fix is (quote Doug and Warner):
> : In an ideal world, there should be some kind of BUS_UNIDENTIFY method
> : which a driver could use to delete the devices it created in
> : BUS_IDENTIFY.
>
> Or the bus would have a driver deleted routine that got called and it
> would remove all instances of the devclass attached to it.
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson & Warner Losh
mappings required by mdstart_swap(). On i386, if the ephemeral mapping
is already in the sf_buf mapping cache, a swap-backed md performs
similarly to a malloc-backed md. Even if the ephemeral mapping is not
cached, this implementation is still faster. On 64-bit platforms, this
change has the effect of using the direct virtual-to-physical mapping,
avoiding ephemeral mapping overheads, such as TLB shootdowns on SMPs.
On a 2.4GHz, 400MHz FSB P4 Xeon configured with 64K sf_bufs and
"mdmfs -S -o async -s 128m md /mnt"
before:
dd if=/dev/md0 of=/dev/null bs=64k
134217728 bytes transferred in 0.430923 secs (311465697 bytes/sec)
after with cold sf_buf cache:
dd if=/dev/md0 of=/dev/null bs=64k
134217728 bytes transferred in 0.367948 secs (364773576 bytes/sec)
after with warm sf_buf cache:
dd if=/dev/md0 of=/dev/null bs=64k
134217728 bytes transferred in 0.252826 secs (530870010 bytes/sec)
malloc-backed md:
dd if=/dev/md0 of=/dev/null bs=64k
134217728 bytes transferred in 0.253126 secs (530240978 bytes/sec)
clip/destroy the dB value contained in the wi(4)'s receive frames,
it doesn't match with the flag set in the radiotap header
(unperturbed dB versus dBm).
mini-layer. I don't have time to bing it forward into the GEOM world, and
no one else has stepped forward to claim it. It'll be in the Attic for safe
keeping for now.
This adds support for cardbus ATA/SATA controllers. I get roughly the
same transfer speeds as on true PCI controllers. Nice to be able to add
a couble of "real" disks to a laptop :)
Only cy, bs and wd in the tree still use it. I have a replacement for
cy that I need to test on ISA and PCI cards. bs and wd are pc98 only
drivers that appear to no longer be necessary. I'll be removing them
when I hear back from the pc98 people.
attach/detach time.
Assigning the default behaviour to this particular device is
incorrect, corrupting the video BIOS aperture, and breaking
VESA support in the kernel and XFree86.
Reviewed By: dfr
MFC after: 1 week
PR: kern/62906
to build the kernel. It doesn't affect the operation if gcc.
Most of the changes are just adding __INTEL_COMPILER to #ifdef's, as
icc v8 may define __GNUC__ some parts may look strange but are
necessary.
Additional changes:
- in_cksum.[ch]:
* use a generic C version instead of the assembly version in the !gcc
case (ASM code breaks with the optimizations icc does)
-> no bad checksums with an icc compiled kernel
Help from: andre, grehan, das
Stolen from: alpha version via ppc version
The entire checksum code should IMHO be replaced with the DragonFly
version (because it isn't guaranteed future revisions of gcc will
include similar optimizations) as in:
---snip---
Revision Changes Path
1.12 +1 -0 src/sys/conf/files.i386
1.4 +142 -558 src/sys/i386/i386/in_cksum.c
1.5 +33 -69 src/sys/i386/include/in_cksum.h
1.5 +2 -0 src/sys/netinet/igmp.c
1.6 +0 -1 src/sys/netinet/in.h
1.6 +2 -0 src/sys/netinet/ip_icmp.c
1.4 +3 -4 src/contrib/ipfilter/ip_compat.h
1.3 +1 -2 src/sbin/natd/icmp.c
1.4 +0 -1 src/sbin/natd/natd.c
1.48 +1 -0 src/sys/conf/files
1.2 +0 -1 src/sys/conf/files.amd64
1.13 +0 -1 src/sys/conf/files.i386
1.5 +0 -1 src/sys/conf/files.pc98
1.7 +1 -1 src/sys/contrib/ipfilter/netinet/fil.c
1.10 +2 -3 src/sys/contrib/ipfilter/netinet/ip_compat.h
1.10 +1 -1 src/sys/contrib/ipfilter/netinet/ip_fil.c
1.7 +1 -1 src/sys/dev/netif/txp/if_txp.c
1.7 +1 -1 src/sys/net/ip_mroute/ip_mroute.c
1.7 +1 -2 src/sys/net/ipfw/ip_fw2.c
1.6 +1 -2 src/sys/netinet/igmp.c
1.4 +158 -116 src/sys/netinet/in_cksum.c
1.6 +1 -1 src/sys/netinet/ip_gre.c
1.7 +1 -2 src/sys/netinet/ip_icmp.c
1.10 +1 -1 src/sys/netinet/ip_input.c
1.10 +1 -2 src/sys/netinet/ip_output.c
1.13 +1 -2 src/sys/netinet/tcp_input.c
1.9 +1 -2 src/sys/netinet/tcp_output.c
1.10 +1 -1 src/sys/netinet/tcp_subr.c
1.10 +1 -1 src/sys/netinet/tcp_syncache.c
1.9 +1 -2 src/sys/netinet/udp_usrreq.c
1.5 +1 -2 src/sys/netinet6/ipsec.c
1.5 +1 -2 src/sys/netproto/ipsec/ipsec.c
1.5 +1 -1 src/sys/netproto/ipsec/ipsec_input.c
1.4 +1 -2 src/sys/netproto/ipsec/ipsec_output.c
and finally remove
sys/i386/i386 in_cksum.c
sys/i386/include in_cksum.h
---snip---
- endian.h:
* DTRT in C++ mode
- quad.h:
* we don't use gcc v1 anymore, remove support for it
Suggested by: bde (long ago)
- assym.h:
* avoid zero-length arrays (remove dependency on a gcc specific
feature)
This change changes the contents of the object file, but as it's
only used to generate some values for a header, and the generator
knows how to handle this, there's no impact in the gcc case.
Explained by: bde
Submitted by: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>
- aicasm.c:
* minor change to teach it about the way icc spells "-nostdinc"
Not approved by: gibbs (no reply to my mail)
- bump __FreeBSD_version (lang/icc needs to know about the changes)
Incarnations of this patch survive gcc compiles since a loooong time,
I use it on my desktop. An icc compiled kernel works since Nov. 2003
(exceptions: snd_* if used as modules), it survives a build of the
entire ports collection with icc.
Parts of this commit contains suggestions or submissions from
Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>.
Reviewed by: -arch
Submitted by: netchild
Intel C/C++ compiler (lang/icc) to build the kernel.
The icc CPUTYPE CFLAGS use icc v7 syntax, icc v8 moans about them, but
doesn't abort. They also produce CPU specific code (new instructions
of the CPU, not only CPU specific scheduling), so if you get coredumps
with signal 4 (SIGILL, illegal instruction) you've used the wrong
CPUTYPE.
Incarnations of this patch survive gcc compiles and my make universe.
I use it on my desktop.
To use it update share/mk, add
/usr/local/intel/compiler70/ia32/bin (icc v7, works)
or
/usr/local/intel_cc_80/bin (icc v8, doesn't work)
to your PATH, make sure you have a new kernel compile directory
(e.g. MYKERNEL_icc) and run
CFLAGS="-O2 -ip" CC=icc make depend
CFLAGS="-O2 -ip" CC=icc make
in it.
Don't compile with -ipo, the build infrastructure uses ld directly to
link the kernel and the modules, but -ipo needs the link step to be
performed with Intel's linker.
Problems with icc v8:
- panic: npx0 cannot be emulated on an SMP system
- UP: first start of /bin/sh results in a FP exception
Parts of this commit contains suggestions or submissions from
Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>.
Reviewed by: silence on -arch
Submitted by: netchild
for Windows are deserialized miniports. Such drivers maintain their own
queues and do their own locking. This particular driver is not deserialized
though, and we need special support to handle it correctly.
Typically, in the ndis_rxeof() handler, we pass all incoming packets
directly to (*ifp->if_input)(). This in turn may cause another thread
to run and preempt us, and the packet may actually be processed and
then released before we even exit the ndis_rxeof() routine. The
problem with this is that releasing a packet calls the ndis_return_packet()
function, which hands the packet and its buffers back to the driver.
Calling ndis_return_packet() before ndis_rxeof() returns will screw
up the driver's internal queues since, not being deserialized,
it does no locking.
To avoid this problem, if we detect a serialized driver (by checking
the attribute flags passed to NdisSetAttributesEx(), we use an alternate
ndis_rxeof() handler, ndis_rxeof_serial(), which puts the call to
(*ifp->if_input)() on the NDIS SWI work queue. This guarantees the
packet won't be processed until after ndis_rxeof_serial() returns.
Note that another approach is to always copy the packet data into
another mbuf and just let the driver retain ownership of the ndis_packet
structure (ndis_return_packet() never needs to be called in this
case). I'm not sure which method is faster.
On vnode backed md(4) devices over a certain, currently undetermined
size relative to the buffer cache our "lemming-syncer" can provoke
a buffer starvation which puts the md thread to sleep on wdrain.
This generally tends to grind the entire system to a stop because the
event that is supposed to wake up the thread will not happen until a fair
bit of the piled up I/O requests in the system finish, and since a lot
of those are on a md(4) vnode backed device which is currently waiting
on wdrain until a fair amount of the piled up ... you get the picture.
The cure is to issue all VOP_WRITES on the vnode backing the device
with IO_SYNC.
In addition to more closely emulating a real disk device with a
non-lying write-cache, this makes the writes exempt from rate-limited
(there to avoid starving the buffer cache) and consequently prevents
the deadlock.
Unfortunately performance takes a hit.
Add "async" option to give people who know what they are doing the
old behaviour.
This may not be a generally valid configuration, but neither is relying
on the PCI clock to be stable.
The only currently known and supported hardware is the VPN14x1 from
Soekris, and since it has external clock, we fail safe(r) by using
it.
Unfortunately there is no way to probe this reliably.
ndis_probe_pci() doesn't contain an entry for an IRQ resource, try to
force one to be routed to us anyway by adding an extra call to
bus_alloc_resource(). If this fails, then we have to abort the attach.
Patch provided by jhb, tweaked by me.
prevented newfs to work on volumes that are larger than 1TB.
PR: 63577
Submitted by: Masaki Takakashi <mtakahashi@se.gtd.cosmo.co.jp>
Approved by: grog (mentor), bde
if_ndis.c has been split into if_ndis_pci.c and if_ndis_pccard.c.
The ndiscvt(8) utility should be able to parse device info for PCMCIA
devices now. The ndis_alloc_amem() has moved from kern_ndis.c to
if_ndis_pccard.c so that kern_ndis.c no longer depends on pccard.
NOTE: this stuff is not guaranteed to work 100% correctly yet. So
far I have been able to load/init my PCMCIA Cisco Aironet 340 card,
but it crashes in the interrupt handler. The existing support for
PCI/cardbus devices should still work as before.
The previous logic meant that if a user sets it to a minimal cooling value
acpi_thermal will not use higher cooling levels. Reverse the logic so that
the user requesting a level (say, 2) also gets 0 - 1 also.
PR: kern/61592
Submitted by: Andrew Thompson <andy@fud.org.nz>
even though the spec mandates this. Some have a value of 5 to indicate
throttling + C2 and some have 7 to indicate an extra C3 state. Support
throttling if the value is >= 4, C2 for >= 5, and C3 for >= 6.
Sort acpi debug values. Change "disable" to "disabled" to match rest of
the kernel. Remove debugging from acpi_toshiba since it was only used for
probe/attach.
checking and freeing a different pointer that may or may not have been
assigned the same value. This should fix panics under load that were
recently reported.
swap-backed memory disks. This reduces filesystem allocation overhead
and makes swap-backed memory disks compatible with broken code (dd,
for example) which expects to see 512 byte sectors. The size of a
swap-backed memory disk must still be a multiple of the page size.
When performing page-aligned operations, this change has zero
performance impact.
Reviewed by: phk
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
on it in hopes of making sure that the waitq was empty before going on.
This wasn't needed and probably never would have worked as intended. Now
that cv_waitq_empty() and friends are gone, the code in these drivers that
spins on it can go away too. This should unbreak LINT.
Discussed with: kan
rid of the MTX_DUPOK flag on channel mutexes, which allows witness to
do a better job of lock order checking. Nuke snd_chnmtxcreate() since
it is no longer needed.
Tested by: matk
channel at a time unless it is actually necessary to lock both.
This avoids problems with lock order reversal and malloc() calls
with a mutex held when lower level code unlocks a channel, calls malloc(),
and relocks the channel. This also avoids the cost of some unnecessary
locking and unlocking.
Tested by: matk
The nonstandard formatting made my mega-patch scripts miss it.
Retire the static major number while we're here anyway.
Reported by: Niels Chr. Bank-Pedersen <ncbp@bank-pedersen.dk>
an integer type and the a cast to (void *) was added in the
definition of NULL for the kernel, we need to use 0 here instead.
Partly submitted by: cperciva
Remove the unused second argument from udev2dev().
Convert all remaining users of makedev() to use udev2dev(). The
semantic difference is that udev2dev() will only locate a pre-existing
dev_t, it will not line makedev() create a new one.
Apart from the tiny well controlled windown in D_PSEUDO drivers,
there should no longer be any "anonymous" dev_t's in the system
now, only dev_t's created with make_dev() and make_dev_alias()
Introduce d_version field in struct cdevsw, this must always be
initialized to D_VERSION.
Flip sense of D_NOGIANT flag to D_NEEDGIANT, this involves removing
four D_NOGIANT flags and adding 145 D_NEEDGIANT flags.
Add missing D_TTY flags to various drivers.
Complete asserts that dev_t's passed to ttyread(), ttywrite(),
ttypoll() and ttykqwrite() have (d_flags & D_TTY) and a struct tty
pointer.
Make ttyread(), ttywrite(), ttypoll() and ttykqwrite() the default
cdevsw methods for D_TTY drivers and remove the explicit initializations
in various drivers cdevsw structures.
This commit adds a couple of functions for pseudodrivers to use for
implementing cloning in a manner we will be able to lock down (shortly).
Basically what happens is that pseudo drivers get a way to ask for
"give me the dev_t with this unit number" or alternatively "give
me a dev_t with the lowest guaranteed free unit number" (there is
unfortunately a lot of non-POLA in the exact numeric value of this
number, just live with it for now)
Managing the unit number space this way removes the need to use
rman(9) to do so in the drivers this greatly simplifies the code in
the drivers because even using rman(9) they still needed to manage
their dev_t's anyway.
I have taken the if_tun, if_tap, snp and nmdm drivers through the
mill, partly because they (ab)used makedev(), but mostly because
together they represent three different problems for device-cloning:
if_tun and snp is the plain case: just give me a device.
if_tap has two kinds of devices, with a flag for device type.
nmdm has paired devices (ala pty) can you can clone either of them.
Free approx 86 major numbers with a mostly automatically generated patch.
A number of strategic drivers have been left behind by caution, and a few
because they still (ab)use their major number.
return events on the fixed handler even after defining a duplicate in the
AML. While this violates the spec, hopefully we can get by with leaving
both installed.
stopped returning events. Don't disable the event when removing
the handler because it still needs to be enabled for the other
handler. Also, remove duplicate AcpiEnableEvent calls since the
install function now does this for us.
Previously the "struct disk" were owned by the device driver and this
gave us problems when the device disappared and the users of that device
were not immediately disappearing.
Now the struct disk is allocate with a new call, disk_alloc() and owned
by geom_disk and just abandonned by the device driver when disk_create()
is called.
Unfortunately, this results in a ton of "s/\./->/" changes to device
drivers.
Since I'm doing the sweep anyway, a couple of other API improvements
have been carried out at the same time:
The Giant awareness flag has been flipped from DISKFLAG_NOGIANT to
DISKFLAG_NEEDSGIANT
A version number have been added to disk_create() so that we can detect,
report and ignore binary drivers with old ABI in the future.
Manual page update to follow shortly.
resources. (Note that the correct range is 0x3f7,0x3f0-0x3f5.) Such
devices will be detected as follows:
fdc0: <Enhanced floppy controller (i82077, NE72065 or clone)> port
0x3f7,0x3f4-0x3f5,0x3f2-0x3f3,0x3f0-0x3f1 irq 6 drq 2 on acpi0
To do this, we find the minimum and maximum start addresses for the
resources and use them as the base for the IO and control ports.
Help from: jhb
is reserved by the loader, and thus any tunable name with that suffix will
be silently discarded.
Document this in the header and man page so that other developers do not
develop so many bumps on the head after banging it against the wall.
Detective work by: Mark Santcroos, grehan
systems define power/sleep buttons in both places but only deliver
notifies to the ones defined in the AML.
Also, reduce length of various function handler names.
PR:
Submitted by:
Reviewed by:
Approved by:
Obtained from:
MFC after:
the "disappearing subdisks" problem when new subdisks can't be created
due to some errors.
This is in fact an ugly hack, but a more elegant solution would probably
require a redesign of vinum in several places.
Approved by: joerg (mentor)
on the card, unmap it first. This allows it to be picked up properly when
the queue gets kicked again. This was the root problem for the lost command
(i.e. stuck in getblk/vinvalb) problem. While here, panic if commands don't
map correctly instead of just silently ignoring the problem and dropping
command. Also slow down the dynamic allocation of new commands.
It should be safe to go back into the aac waters. Thanks to everyone who
suffered through this and provided good feedback.
seems to work well in RELENG_4. However, 5.X locking foo means that I'll
have to do some quick redesign.
Add ioctl handlers for ISP_GETROLE and ISP_SETROLE ioctls.
handling of resources shortages. The driver is now so fast that it can
completely fill all 512 slots on the card, but for some reason only 511
slots are being allocated. Anything that tries to go into the 512th
slot gets silently lost. Both bugs need to be fixed at a later date,
but this should fix the reports of hangs in getblk and vinvalb.
edge cases in the loop.
- Try to grab a command before dequeueing the bio from the bioq. The old
behaviour of requeuing deferred bios to the end of the bioq is arguably
wrong. This should be fixed in the future to check the bioq head without
automatically dequeueing the bio.
aic79xx.seq:
Convert the COMPLETE_DMA_SCB list to an "stailq". This allows us to
safely keep the SCB that is currently being DMA'ed back the host on
the head of the list while processing completions off of the bus. The
newly completed SCBs are appended to the tail of the queue. In the
past, we just dequeued the SCB that was in flight from the list, but
this could result in a lost completion should the host perform certain
types of error recovery that must cancel all in-flight SCB DMA operations.
Switch from using a 16bit completion entry, holding just the tag and the
completion valid bit, to a 64bit completion entry that also contains a
"status packet valid" indicator. This solves two problems:
o The SCB DMA engine on at least Rev B. silicon does not properly deal
with a PCI disconnect that occurs at a non-64bit aligned offset in the
chips "source buffer". When the transfer is resumed, the DMA engine
continues at the correct offset, but may wrap to the head of the buffer
causing duplicate completions to be reported to the host. By using a
completion buffer in host memory that is 64bit aligned and using 64bit
completion entries, such disconnects should only occur at aligned addresses.
This assumes that the host bridge will only disconnect on cache-line
boundaries and that cache-lines are multpiles of 64bits.
o By embedding the status information in the completion entry we can avoid
an extra memory reference to the HSCB for commands that complete without
error.
Use the comparison of a "host freeze count" and a "sequencer freeze count"
to allow the host to process most SCBs that complete with non-zero status
without having to clear critical sections. Instead the host can just pause the
sequencer, performs any necessary cleanup in the waiting for selection list,
increments its freeze count on the controller, and unpauses. This is only
possible because the sequencer defers completions of SCBs with bad status
until after all pending selections have completed. The sequencer then avoids
referencing any data structures the host may touch during completion of the
SCB until the freeze counts match.
aic79xx.c:
Change the strategy for allocating our sentinal HSCB for the QINFIFO. In
the past, this allocation was tacked onto the QOUTFIFO allocation. Now that
the qoutfifo has grown to accomodate larger completion entries, the old
approach will result in a 64byte allocation that costs an extra page of
coherent memory. We now do this extra allocation via ahd_alloc_scbs()
where the "unused space" can be used to allocate "normal" HSCBs.
In our packetized busfree handler, use the ENSELO bit to differentiate
between packetized and non-packetized unexpected busfree events that
occur just after selection, but before the sequencer has had the oportunity
to service the selection.
When cleaning out the waiting for selection list, use the SCSI mode
instead of the command channel mode. The SCB pointer in the command
channel mode may be referenced by the SCB dma engine even while the
sequencer is paused, whereas the SCSI mode SCB pointer is only accessed
by the sequencer.
Print the "complete on qfreeze" sequencer SCB completion list in
ahd_dump_card_state(). This list holds all SCB completions that are deferred
until a pending select-out qfreeze event has taken effect.
aic79xx.h:
Add definitions and structures to handle the new SCB completion scheme.
Add a controller flag that indicates if the controller is in HostRAID
mode.
aic79xx.reg:
Remove macros used for toggling from one data fifo mode to the other.
They have not been in use for some time.
Add scratch ram fields for our new qfreeze count scheme, converting
the complete dma list into an "stailq", and providing for the "complete
on qfreeze" SCB completion list. Some other fields were moved to retain
proper field alignment (alignment >= field size in bytes).
aic79xx.seq:
Add code to our idle loop to:
o Process deferred completions once a qfreeze event has taken full
effect.
o Thaw the queue once the sequencer and host qfreeze counts match.
Generate 64bit completion entries passing the SCB_SGPTR field as the
"good status" indicator. The first bit in this field is only set if
we have a valid status packet to send to the host.
Convert the COMPLETE_DMA_SCB list to an "stailq".
When using "setjmp" to register an idle loop handler, do not combine
the "ret" with the block move to pop the stack address in the same
instruction. At least on the A, this results in a return to the setjmp
caller, not to the new address at the top of the stack. Since we want
the latter (we want the newly registered handler to only be invoked from
the idle loop), we must use a separate ret instruction.
Add a few missing critical sections.
Close a race condition that can occur on Rev A. silicon. If both FIFOs
happen to be allocated before the sequencer has a chance to service the
FIFO that was allocated first, we must take special care to service the
FIFO that is not active on the SCSI bus first. This guarantees that a
FIFO will be freed to handle any snapshot requests for the FIFO that is
still on the bus. Chosing the incorrect FIFO will result in deadlock.
Update comments.
aic79xx_inline.h
Correct the offset calculation for the syncing of our qoutfifo.
Update ahd_check_cmdcmpltqueues() for the larger completion entries.
aic79xx_pci.c:
Attach to HostRAID controllers by default. In the future I may add a
sysctl to modify the behavior, but since FreeBSD does not have any
HostRAID drivers, failing to attach just results in more email and
bug reports for the author.
MFC After: 1week
that Asus provides on its CDs has both a MiniportSend() routine
and a MiniportSendPackets() function. The Microsoft NDIS docs say
that if a driver has both, only the MiniportSendPackets() routine
will be used. Although I think I implemented the support correctly,
calling the MiniportSend() routine seems to result in no packets going
out on the air, even though no error status is returned. The
MiniportSendPackets() function does work though, so at least in
this case it doesn't matter.
In if_ndis.c:ndis_getstate_80211(), if ndis_get_assoc() returns
an error, don't bother trying to obtain any other state since the
calls may fail, or worse cause the underlying driver to crash.
(The above two changes make the Asus-supplied Centrino work.)
Also, when calling the OID_802_11_CONFIGURATION OID, remember
to initialize the structure lengths correctly.
In subr_ndis.c:ndis_open_file(), set the current working directory
to rootvnode if we're in a thread that doesn't have a current
working directory set.
it is still above the critical temperature on the next poll cycle. This
is a 10 second advance notice by default. Document the private
(non-standard) notify we will be using with devd(8).
the system. Also, decrease the poll interval to 10 seconds from 30
seconds. This is needed because some systems will report an invalid high
temperature for one poll cycle. It is suspected this is due to the
embedded controller timing out. A typical value is 138C for one cycle on a
system that is otherwise 65C. This prevents the system from prematurely
shutting down after one invalid reading. It will still shut down after 30
seconds of high temperature, which is the same as previous default
behavior.
Tested by: Scott Lambert <lambert AT lambertfam.org>
is for an 802.11 device or not. At least one driver I have does not
support the OID_802_11_NETWORK_TYPES_SUPPORTED OID.
Also, for now, don't do anything special in the ndis_suspend() method.
I originally wanted to shut down the NIC but leave the IFF_UP flag alone
since technically the interface is meant to remain up, but an interrupt
may be delivered to the ISR on suspend, and if this happens while the
NIC is halted, we will crash, since none of the miniport driver methods
will function.
This needs to be dealt with properly later, but for now this prevents
a panic, and the resume method properly re-inits the NIC.