code was adjusting twice for the instruction pointer indicating
the *next* instruction to execute. The aic79xx driver had a similar
bug, but was fixed some time ago.
* Serialize access to the sysctl routines and the notify handler
* Assert that the sx lock is held in any functions they call.
* Note that recursively calling to re-enable the hotkeys is sub-optimal.
* Remove the interrupt wrapper that locked Giant and call the handler
directly. Mark the handler as MPSAFE.
* Don't attempt to detect if a handler is installed. Leave that to the
bus_alloc_resource() function.
* Serialize operations in acpi_video_bind_outputs(), acpi_video_detach(),
acpi_video_notify_handler(), acpi_video_power_profile(), and the sysctls.
The main goal is to protect the shared device list and prevent conflicting
settings.
* Add assertions that the sx lock is held in the leaf functions.
* Restructure the event handling path. acpi_tz_thread() now calls
acpi_tz_timeout() any time an event occurs. acpi_tz_timeout() checks
the flags and calls acpi_tz_power_profile(), acpi_tz_establish(), and
acpi_tz_monitor() as appropriate. Notifies only do a wakeup and let
acpi_tz_thread() do the actual work. This path is cleaner and allows
locking since the call path is now always a D.A.G.
* Add the acpi_tz_signal() function to set flags and wake the thread.
* Remove the tz_tmp_updating flag since calls are serialized by
acpi_tz_thread().
* Remove Giant locking.
* Serialize acpi_pwr_switch_consumer() and acpi_pwr_wake_enable().
* Make acpi_pwr_switch_consumer() have a single exit point.
* Add assertions to the leaf functions they call.
* Fix a memory leak in acpi_pwr_deregister_consumer(). However, it is
currently ifdefed out so this code was unused.
* Serialize access to acpi_pci_link_config(), acpi_pci_find_prt(),
acpi_pci_link_route(), and acpi_pci_link_resume().
* Add lock assertions to all functions called by them.
* Serialize notifying the user in acpi_lid_notify_status_changed(). This
way multiple lid events occur in order.
* Add an initialization pass to get the lid status at boot-time. This
pass does not notify any apps but gets the initial status.
* Use the common serialization macros instead of rolling our own.
* Increase the coverage of the lock in EcSpaceHandler() to cover the entire
loop to avoid dropping the lock when reading more than one byte.
* Serialize ops in acpi_cmbat_notify_handler(), acpi_cmbat_ioctl(),
acpi_cmbat_init_battery(), and acpi_cmbat_get_battinfo().
* Get the softc directly in acpi_cmbat_get_total_battinfo() rather than
build an array of them.
* Don't queue a _BIF query after receiving a notify. Since we clear the
timespec, a _BIF query will be done in the context of the next caller.
* Add asserts to leaf functions that operate on shared data.
* Remove the bst/bif updating flags now that we hold the lock over the
full query.
* Explain various comments in more detail.
* Serialize acpi_battery_get_battdesc(), acpi_battery_register(), and
acpi_battery_remove().
* Assert that the sx lock is held in acpi_batteries_init().
* Remove check for device_get_softc() returning NULL.
* Serialize notification of acline changes in acpi_acad_get_status().
* Remove the initializing flag. With the locking, we don't need to
push off requests for the acline before initialization is done.
* Don't check device_get_softc(), it can't return NULL.
* Serialize calls to acpi_alloc_resource(), acpi_release_resource(),
acpi_Enable(), acpi_Disable(), and acpi_debug_sysctl().
* Acquire the ACPI mutex in acpi_register_ioctl(), acpi_deregister_ioctl(),
and acpiioctl().
* Acquire the mutex while disabling subsequent requests to enter a
sleep state in acpi_SetSleepState().
* Be sure to re-enable sleep requests and don't run resume methods when
the current request fails.
* Don't check if sleep requests are disabled in the ACPIIO_SETSLPSTATE
ioctl. acpi_SetSleepState() does this for us.
* Remove the acquisition of Giant from the struct cdevsw.
* Remove the ACPI_USE_THREADS option.
* Add and comment our locking primitives. The mutex primitives use a
a static mutex and the serialization ones use a static sx lock. A global
acpi_mutex is used for access to global resources (i.e., writes to the
SMI_CMD register.)
* Remove 4.x compat defines.
subset ("compatible", "device_type", "model" and "name") of the standard
properties in drivers for devices on Open Firmware supported busses. The
standard properties "reg", "interrupts" und "address" are not covered by
this interface because they are only of interest in the respective bridge
code. There's a remaining standard property "status" which is unclear how
to support properly but which also isn't used in FreeBSD at present.
This ofw_bus kobj-interface allows to replace the various (ebus_get_node(),
ofw_pci_get_node(), etc.) and partially inconsistent (central_get_type()
vs. sbus_get_device_type(), etc.) existing IVAR ones with a common one.
This in turn allows to simplify and remove code-duplication in drivers for
devices that can hang off of more than one OFW supported bus.
- Convert the sparc64 Central, EBus, FHC, PCI and SBus bus drivers and the
drivers for their children to use the ofw_bus kobj-interface. The IVAR-
interfaces of the Central, EBus and FHC are entirely replaced by this. The
PCI bus driver used its own kobj-interface and now also uses the ofw_bus
one. The IVARs special to the SBus, e.g. for retrieving the burst size,
remain.
Beware: this causes an ABI-breakage for modules of drivers which used the
IVAR-interfaces, i.e. esp(4), hme(4), isp(4) and uart(4), which need to be
recompiled.
The style-inconsistencies introduced in some of the bus drivers will be
fixed by tmm@ in a generic clean-up of the respective drivers later (he
requested to add the changes in the "new" style).
- Convert the powerpc MacIO bus driver and the drivers for its children to
use the ofw_bus kobj-interface. This invloves removing the IVARs related
to the "reg" property which were unused and a leftover from the NetBSD
origini of the code. There's no ABI-breakage caused by this because none
of these driver are currently built as modules.
There are other powerpc bus drivers which can be converted to the ofw_bus
kobj-interface, e.g. the PCI bus driver, which should be done together
with converting powerpc to use the OFW PCI code from sparc64.
- Make the SBus and FHC front-end of zs(4) and the sparc64 eeprom(4) take
advantage of the ofw_bus kobj-interface and simplify them a bit.
Reviewed by: grehan, tmm
Approved by: re (scottl)
Discussed with: tmm
Tested with: Sun AX1105, AXe, Ultra 2, Ultra 60; PPC cross-build on i386
there is no irq link. Since we now use the stored copy of PRT, not the
one that used to be passed into acpi_pcib_route_interrupt(), we need it in
the list. [1]
Fix a bug in acpi_pci_find_prt() where we weren't checking the bus, thus
choosing the wrong PRT entry to use for routing the link. Also, add a
printf for the case where the PRT entry is not found as this should not
happen.
Tested by: marcel [1]
incomplete in that the PRT routing was not aware of link programming.
Fix this by doing all routing through the link devices. The new algorithm
for setting up links is:
1. Read _CRS to get current setting. If invalid (not in _PRS), then set
to 0.
2. Attempt to call _DIS on the link. If successful, mark the link as not
routed. Otherwise, assume it still is.
Then when a routing request occurs:
3. Update weights for all IRQs
4. Attempt to route the initial IRQ if valid
5. If that fails, walk through the sorted list, attempting to route IRQs.
6. Configure the trigger/polarity based on _PRS.
Other changes:
* Add acpi_pci_find_prt() to look up the PRT entry for a given device and
acpi_pci_link_route() to select/route the best IRQ for it.
* Remove duplicated code in acpi_pcib_route_interrupt() that picked the
first IRQ from _PRS.
* Remove unneeded arguments from acpi_pcib_resume() and friends.
* Ignore _STA on link devices but report if it seems strange.
* Add a prt_source handle to the PRT structure since the ACPI struct
ACPI_PCI_ROUTING_TABLE uses a fixed-size entry for it. We'll need to
dynamically size this object if we want to use it the same way ACPI-CA
does. Null-terminate the source.
Tested by: Luo Hong <luohong99_at_mails.tsinghua.edu.cn>,
Jeffrey Katcher <jmkatcher_at_yahoo.com>
Info from: jhb, Len Brown (Intel)
if_start routines cannot currently be entered without Giant. When
the kernel is running with debug.mpsafenet != 0, this will defer
if_start execution to a task queue thread holding Giant, which may
introduce additional latency, but avoid incorrect execution.
Suggested by: dfr
full, avoiding the cost of mutex operations if it is. We re-test
once the mutex is acquired to make sure it's still true before doing
the -modify-write part of the read-modify-write. Note that due to
the maximum fifo depth being pretty deep, this is unlikely to improve
harvesting performance yet.
Approved by: markm
chipsets, based on Linux's via-agp.c. On boot, the system selects which AGP
version to use based on the inserted card. If v2 was chosen, the chipset
needs to be programmed with the v2 registers still. Also included in kern/69953
are changes to make the programming of the v3 registers match linux, but that
will be left out until the need to do so is confirmed (want specs or a tester).
PR: kern/69953
Submitted by: Oleg Sharoiko <os@rsu.ru>
Tested by: Oleg Sharoiko <os@rsu.ru>, Geoff Speicher <geoff@speicher.org>
(full version from PR)
o Change the motion calculation to result in
a more reasonable speed of motion
This should fix the 'aiming' problems people have reported. It also
mitigates (but doesn't completely solve) the 'stalling' problems at
very low speeds.
Tested by: many subscribers to -current
Approved by: njl
o Catch 'taps' as button presses
o One finger sends button1, two fingers send button3,
three fingers send button2 (double-click)
Tested by: many subscribers to -current
Approved by: njl
o Handle the 'up/down' buttons some touchpads have as
a z-axis (scrollwheel) as recommended by the specs
o Report the buttons as button4 and button5 instead
of button2 and button4, button2 can be emulated by
pressing button1 and button3 simultaneously. This
allows one to use the two extra buttons for other
purposes if one so desires.
Tested by: many subscribers to -current
Approved by: njl
o Clean up whitespace and comments in the
enable_synaptics() probing function
o Only use (and rely on) the extended capability
bits when we are told they actually exist
o Partly ignore the (possibly dated?) part of the
specification about the mode byte so that we
can support 'guest devices' too.
Tested by: many subscribers to -current
Approved by: njl
was being unconditionally dereferenced but was NULL for PIO requests.
Check the request flags for a DMA transaction before dereferencing.
Reported by: ceri
Tested by: Radek Kozlowski <radek -at- raadradd.com>
with it that need to be understood better before they can be resolved.
This takes time and time is already in short supply.
Reported & tested by: glebius@
message if they are incorrect. Also, remove the hack of allowing the
initial irq setting to not be in _PRS. As before, the old behavior can be
regained by defining ACPI_OLD_PCI_LINK.
want a splash screen.
There seems to be some confusion in the syscons code as to the meaning of
the SC_KERNEL_CONSOLE flag. Its absence is sometimes interpreted to mean
"I am not the system console", and sometimes to mean "I am not the only
VGA console" (see the font loading code for an example of the latter).
Someone with better syscons fu than myself should take a closer look.
following behavior:
* Link devices return invalid status (_STA) values. The results are very
unreliable -- sometimes never present. Just ignore the status and pick
the best configuration from _PRS.
* Link devices return invalid current settings (_CRS). Even after setting
the link value, many systems still return a different setting for _CRS.
When setting an IRQ, don't bother to check _CRS to see if we succeeded.
Note that we still check _CRS before routing and this should be addressed
as well.
Since this is a sensitive area, leave the old behavior accessible via
uncommenting the define for ACPI_OLD_PCI_LINK at the top of the file. Once
this has been thoroughly tested, this option and the code it covers will
be removed.
Thanks to Len Brown at Intel for informing us of these issues as he worked
around them in Linux.
Since HME doesn't compensate the checksum for UDP datagram which
can yield to 0x0, UDP transmit checksum offload is disabled by
default. The UDP Transmit checksum offload can be reactivated
by setting special link option link0 with ifconfig(8).
Approved by: jake (mentor)
Reviewed by: tmm
Tested by: Herve Boulouis <amon@sockar.homeip.net>
by a transaction performing a driver handled message sequence (an
scb with the MK_MESSAGE flag set).
SCBs that perform host managed messaging must always be
at the head of their per-target selection queue so that
the firmware knows to manually assert ATN if the current
negotiation agreement is packetized. In the past we
guaranteed this by queuing these SCBs separarately in
the execution queue. This exposes the system to potential
command reordering in two cases:
1) Another SCB for the same ITL nexus is queued that does
not have the MK_MESSAGE flag set. This SCB will be
queued to the per-target list which can be serviced
before the MK_MESSAGE scb that preceeded it.
2) If the target cannot accept all of the commands in the
per-target selection queue in one selection, the remainder
is queued to the tail of the selection queues so as to
effect round-robin scheduling. This could allow the
MK_MESSAGE scb to be sent to the target before the
requeued commands.
This commit changes the firmware policy to defer queuing
MK_MESSAGE SCBs into the selection queues until this can
be done without affecting order. This means that the
target's selection queue is either empty, or the last
SCB on the execution queue is also a MK_MESSAGE SCB.
During any wait, the firmware halts the download of new
SCBs so only a single "holding location" is required.
Luckily, MK_MESSAGE SCBs are rare and typically occur only
during CAM's bus probe where only one command is outstanding
at a time. However, during some recovery scenarios, the
reordering *could* occur.
aic79xx.c:
Update ahd_search_qinfifo() and helper routines to
search for pending MK_MESSAGE scbs and properly
restitch the execution queue if either the MK_MESSAGE
SCB is being aborted, or the MK_MESSAGE SCB can be
queued due to the execution queue draining due to
aborts.
Enable LQOBUSFREE status to assert an interrupt.
This should be redundant since a BUSFREE interrupt
should always occur along with an LQOBUSFREE event,
but on the Rev A, this doesn't seem to be guaranteed.
When a PPR request is rejected when a previously
existing packetized agreement is in place, assume
that the target has been reset without our knowledge
and revert to async/narrow transfers. This corrects
two issues: the stale ENATNO setting that was used
to send the PPR is cleared so the firmware is not
confused by a future packetized selection with
ATN asserted but no MK_MESSAGE flag in the SCB and
it speeds up recovery by aborting any pending
packetized transactions that by definition are now
dead.
When re-queueing SCBs after a failed negotiation
attempt, ensure command ordering by freezing the
device queue first.
Traverse the list of pending SCBs rather than the
whole SCB array on the controller when pushing
MK_MESSAGE flag changes out to the controller.
The original code was optimized for the aic7xxx
controllers where there are fewer controller slots
then pending SCBs and the firmware picks SCB
slots. For the U320 controller, the hope is
that we have fewer pending SCBs then the 512
slots on the controller.
Enhance some diagnostics.
Factor out some common code.
aic79xx.h:
Add prototype for new ahd_done_with_status() that is
used to factor out some commone code.
aic79xx.reg:
Add definisions for the pending MK_MESSAGE SCB.
aic79xx.seq:
Defer MK_MESSAGE SCB queing to the execution queue
so as to preserve command ordering. Re-arrange some
of the selection processing code so the above change
had no performance impact on the common code path.
Close a few critical section holes.
When entering a non-packetized phase, manually enable
busfree interrupts, since the controller hardware
does not do this automatically.
aic79xx_inline.h:
Enhance logging for queued SCBs.
aic79xx_osm.c:
Add new a new DDB ahd command, ahd_dump, which
invokes the ahd_dump_card_state() routine on the
unit specified with the ahd_sunit DDB command.
aic79xx_pci.c:
Turn on the BUSFREEREV bug for the Rev B. controller.
This is required to close the busfree during non-packetized
phase hole.
into single-user mode (as seen on sparc64 and PPC). Problems were due
to a minor oversight in the changes committed in revision 1.25.
Submitted by: grehan
Tested by: gad & yongari
unconditionally, stop after the first one (system board) if no EISA hardware
is detected. This fixes a boot hang (i.e. Thinkpad) when ACPI is disabled.
Also, split the probe code into a separate function and do some style cleanup.
Note that the Adaptec 2842 VLB controller probe is broken by this change
and will fail to probe. It should be fixed separately.
in case of a CHECK CONDITION.
- Make this driver return SCSI status information.
- While here, factor out the clearing of the CAM status from every
element of the switch statement to only once before the switch.
This fixes burning CDs with recent cdrecord 2.01 alpha versions and
burners attached to asr(4) controllers but there could have been
other applications and da(4) etc. also affected.
Reviewed by: gibbs, scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
skip blocks that are too big by a factor of two or greater. This
avoids some cases of extremely inefficient memory use that can occur
when large (e.g. 64k) blocks on the free list get used when allocating
a 4k chunk of 64-byte fragments. Because fragments have their own
free list, the 60k difference got lost forever every time.
system BIOS to disable legacy device emulation as per the "EHCI
Extended Capability: Pre-OS to OS Handoff Synchronisation" section
of the EHCI spec. BIOSes that implement legacy emulation using SMIs
are supposed to disable the emulation when this procedure is performed.
so that they know whether the allocation is supposed to be able to sleep
or not.
* Allow uma_zone constructors and initialation functions to return either
success or error. Almost all of the ones in the tree currently return
success unconditionally, but mbuf is a notable exception: the packet
zone constructor wants to be able to fail if it cannot suballocate an
mbuf cluster, and the mbuf allocators want to be able to fail in general
in a MAC kernel if the MAC mbuf initializer fails. This fixes the
panics people are seeing when they run out of memory for mbuf clusters.
* Allow debug.nosleepwithlocks on WITNESS to be disabled, without changing
the default.
Both bmilekic and jeff have reviewed the changes made to make failable
zone allocations work.
now, but it's possible for ndis_reset_nic() to sleep (sometimes the
MiniportReset() method returns NDIS_STATUS_PENDING and we have
to wait for completion). To get around this, execute the ndis_reset_nic()
routine in the NDIS_TASKQUEUE thread.
to be particularly correct or optimal, but it seems to be enough
to allow the attachment of USB2 hubs and USB2 devices connected via
USB2 hubs. None of the split transaction support is implemented in
our USB stack, so USB1 peripherals will definitely not work when
connected via USB2 hubs.
their own directory and module, leaving the MD parts in the MD
area (the MD parts _are_ part of the modules). /dev/mem and /dev/io
are now loadable modules, thus taking us one step further towards
a kernel created entirely out of modules. Of course, there is nothing
preventing the kernel from having these statically compiled.
submitted version with style cleanups and changes to comments. I also
modified the ioctl interface. This version only has one ioctl (to get
the Synaptics-specific config parameters) since this is the only
information a user might want.
Submitted by: Arne Schwabe <arne -at- rfc2549.org>
* Some systems have _FDE and child floppy devices, but no _FDI. This seems
to be compatible with the standard. Don't error out if there is no _FDI.
Instead, continue on to the next device. The normal fd probe will take
care of this device.
* Some systems have _FDE but no child devices in AML. For these, add a
second pass that compares the results of _FDE to the presence of devices.
If not present, add the missing device.
* Some BIOS authors didn't read the spec. They use tape drive values for
all fdc(4) devices. Since this isn't grossly incompatible with the
required boolean value, use them. They also define the _FDE items as a
package instead of buffer. Regenerate the buffer from the package if it
is present.
Tested by: tjr, marcel
ACPI_DEBUG. This upset the ordering that acpi_probe_order() was meant to
provide, causing devices to attach before the sysresource object. This
debugging feature has been unnecessary for a while so just remove it.
Testing by: marcel
Properly wait for not busy and introduce a timeout for devices not
setting busy (as they should).
Leave a printf in there that states how long the wait was, as I'd like
to get an idea of the variations here. The time needed seems also to be
affected by whether a medium is present or not.
FOREACH_SAFE. Remove bad cast of retp and instead use an additional
arg to pass back the number of valid outputs. Use the package convenience
functions for parsing packages.
(in particular, bge(4) hasn't supported rxcsum since if_bge.c#1.5)
Clean up some aspects of capabilities usage, i.e. stop using
if_hwassist to see whether we are doing offload now because if_hwassist
is for TCP/IP layer and it is subordinate to if_capenable.
Thanks to: Aled Morris for donating a nice bge(4) NIC to me
Reviewed by: -net, -hackers (silence)
happens because the sio device was never opened and com->tp is
therefore NULL. ttygone can't swallow a NULL, so guard against that
possibility. Other places in this function make similar checks, so I
believe this is correct.
Improve child_detached a little and make it conform better to
style(9). Also, improve comment about what we'll be doing in the
future about driver_added. Soon it will be possible to kldload usb
drivers and have them attach w/o a need to disconnect/reconnect them.
the data sheets leads me to believe these will just work. Those parts
with the various media readers on them may not have the required
FreeBSD drivers that will attach to the subdevices that will be seen
on some of these parts.
PCI 1515, 1530, 1620, 4520, 6411, 6420, 7410, 7510, 7610
Prompted by: Havard Eidnes
These are from the datasheets downloaded from TI's web site.
They describe the PCI[67]x[12]1 and PCI[67]x20 parts, with and without
the smartcard enabled.
Also introduce a macro to be called by persistent nodes to signal their
persistence during shutdown to hide this mechanism from the node author.
Make node flags have a consistent style in naming.
Document the change.
usbdi.c rev. 1.104, author: mycroft
ugen_isoc_rintr() may recycle the xfer immediately. Therefore, we
avoid touching the xfer after calling the callback in
usb_transfer_complete(). From PR 25960.
left around after the PCI probe, acpi_video stopped attaching because while
it was an acpi child device, it really is a PCI device. Fix this by making
it a PCI child.
* Remove non-handle ivars accesses since child busses only implement
acpi_get_handle().
* Access the acpi softc directly through the devclass instead of through
the implied parent.
* Clean up a potential panic on unload by freeing the sysctl context before
storing NULL in the OID.
Found by: marks
- `sound'
The generic sound driver, always required.
- `snd_*'
Device-dependent drivers, named after the sound module names.
Configure accordingly to your hardware.
In addition, rename the `snd_pcm' module to `sound' in order to sync
with the driver names.
Suggested by: cg
future:
rename ttyopen() -> tty_open() and ttyclose() -> tty_close().
We need the ttyopen() and ttyclose() for the new generic cdevsw
functions for tty devices in order to have consistent naming.
rev. 1.67, author: mycroft
Fix a byte order error.
rev. 1.68, author: mycroft
Adjust some silliness that was causing us to do extra work for
"frame list rollover" interrupts, which we pretty much ignore.
Obtained from: NetBSD
hints-based probe to fdc_hints_probe().
Also:
* Fix some resource leaks when attach fails.
* Remove the FDC_ATTACHED flag. It was supposed to prevent multiple
unloads but this is not necessary.
allows a bus to re-enumerate its child handles and optionally replace
them with new children, arranged to the bus's liking. (The current device
space is flat with all devices immediately under acpi0). Add comments
for each interface.
for unknown events.
A number of modules return EINVAL in this instance, and I have left
those alone for now and instead taught MOD_QUIESCE to accept this
as "didn't do anything".
when the battery is fully charged. That breaks some of the arithmetic in
calculating the remaining capacity (ends up with more than 100%).
This commit makes sure the max is 100.
Approved by: njl
Add a MOD_QUIESCE event for modules. This should return error (EBUSY)
of the module is in use.
MOD_UNLOAD should now only fail if it is impossible (as opposed to
inconvenient) to unload the module. Valid reasons are memory references
into the module which cannot be tracked down and eliminated.
When kldunloading, we abandon if MOD_UNLOAD fails, and if -force is
not given, MOD_QUIESCE failing will also prevent the unload.
For backwards compatibility, we treat EOPNOTSUPP from MOD_QUIESCE as
success.
Document that modules should return EOPNOTSUPP for unknown events.
needed so that sysresource objects are created first to reserve all regions,
then other devices can allocate from them. Otherwise, acpi_timer (the only
ACPI device with an identify routine), would allocate its resources from
the nexus, causing the later sysresource reserve to fail.
Debugging by: Taku YAMAMOTO, Andrea Campi
* Add an fdtype ivar. This will be the equivalent of fd->type.
* Move enabling the FIFO to the end of attach.
* Unify reset code into fdc_initial_reset().
* Add fdc_write_ivar().
* Update isa and pccard attachments accordingly.
* Set the flags unconditionally in probe since they may be overridden by
other probe routines. Both before and now, we're depending on probe
being called a final time on the winning driver so the flags we get are
the ones we intended.
* Use the bus accessor macros instead of defining our own.
* Remove duplicate assigns of fd->type.
actually work.
Make the PCI and PCCARD attachments provide a bus_get_resource_list()
method so that resource listing for PCCARD works. PCCARD does not
have a bus_get_resource_list() method (yet), so I faked up the
resource list management in if_ndis_pccard.c, and added
bus_get_resource_list() methods to both if_ndis_pccard.c and if_ndis_pci.c.
The one in the PCI attechment just hands off to the PCI bus code.
The difference is transparent to the NDIS resource handler code.
Fixed ndis_open_file() so that opening files which live on NFS
filesystems work: pass an actual ucred structure to VOP_GETATTR()
(NFS explodes if the ucred structure is NOCRED).
Make NdisMMapIoSpace() handle mapping of PCMCIA attribute memory
resources correctly.
Turn subr_ndis.c:my_strcasecmp() into ndis_strcasecmp() and export
it so that if_ndis_pccard.c can use it, and junk the other copy
of my_strcasecmp() from if_ndis_pccard.c.
it's in the way even more. Basicly: remove all alpha specific console
support from gfb(4), sio(4) and syscons(4). Rewrite the alpha console
initialization to be identical to all other platforms. In a nutshell:
call cninit().
The platform specific code now only sets or clears RB_SERIAL and thus
automaticly causes the right console to be selected.
sio.c:
o Replace the remote GDB hacks and use the GDB debug port interface
instead.
o Make debugging code conditional upon KDB instead of DDB.
o Call kdb_alt_break() instead of db_alt_break().
o Call kdb_enter() instead of breakpoint().
o Remove the ugly compatibility of using the console as the debug
port.
o Call kdb_enter() instead of breakpoint().
o Call kdb_alt_break() instead of db_alt_break().
o Make debugging code conditional upon KDB instead of DDB.
o Make debugging code conditional upon KDB instead of DDB.
o Call kdb_alt_break() instead of db_alt_break().
o Call kdb_enter() instead of breakpoint().
o Call kdb_enter() instead of Debugger().
o Don't make such calls conditional upon KDB instead of DDB because
they're already conditional upon EN_DEBUG.
o Use kdb_alt_break() to handle the alternate break sequence instead
of handcoding it here.
o Remove GDB kluges to make this driver work with the pre-KDB remote
GDB code.
o Call kdb_enter() instead of Debugger().
Note that with this commit the dcons(4) driver cannot be used for
remote debugging anymore. This driver has to use the new GDB debug
port interface instead. Such has not been done yet.
- Add *_locked() entry points as needed to avoid unnecessary lock thrashing.
- Use these entry points wisely.
- Only acquire the lock once when servicing an interrupt.
- Check 'suspended' on interrupt to avoid racing detach.
- Correct a mis-spelled comment.
- Don't take the lock in vr_reset() to avoid lock thrashing in attach.
- Comment this.
Reviewed by: -net (silence)
step in making this driver more attachment neutral. Others plan on
adding acpi front ends.
Still need to cleanup the MI part of the driver because it isn't as
bus independent as it could be.
- In subr_ndis.c:ndis_allocate_sharemem(), create the busdma tags
used for shared memory allocations with a lowaddr of 0x3E7FFFFF.
This forces the buffers to be mapped to physical/bus addresses within
the first 1GB of physical memory. It seems that at least one card
(Linksys Instant Wireless PCI V2.7) depends on this behavior. I
don't know if this is a hardware restriction, or if the NDIS
driver for this card is truncating the addresses itself, but using
physical/bus addresses beyong the 1GB limit causes initialization
failures.
- Create am NDIS_INITIALIZED() macro in if_ndisvar.h and use it in
if_ndis.c to test whether the device has been initialized rather
than checking for the presence of the IFF_UP flag in if_flags.
While debugging the previous problem, I noticed that bringing
up the device would always produce failures from ndis_setmulti().
It turns out that the following steps now occur during device
initialization:
- IFF_UP flag is set in if_flags
- ifp->if_ioctl() called with SIOCSIFADDR (which we don't handle)
- ifp->if_ioctl() called with SIOCADDMULTI
- ifp->if_ioctl() called with SIOCADDMULTI (again)
- ifp->if_ioctl() called with SIOCADDMULTI (yet again)
- ifp->if_ioctl() called with SIOCSIFFLAGS
Setting the receive filter and multicast filters can only be done
when the underlying NDIS driver has been initialized, which is done
by ifp->if_init(). However, we don't call ifp->if_init() until
ifp->if_ioctl() is called with SIOCSIFFLAGS and IFF_UP has been
set. It appears that now, the network stack tries to add multicast
addresses to interface's filter before those steps occur. Normally,
ndis_setmulti() would trap this condition by checking for the IFF_UP
flag, but the network code has in fact set this flag already, so
ndis_setmulti() is fooled into thinking the interface has been
initialized when it really hasn't.
It turns out this is usually harmless because the ifp->if_init()
routine (in this case ndis_init()) will set up the multicast
filter when it initializes the hardware anyway, and the underlying
routines (ndis_get_info()/ndis_set_info()) know that the driver/NIC
haven't been initialized yet, but you end up spurious error messages
on the console all the time.
Something tells me this new behavior isn't really correct. I think
the intention was to fix it so that ifp->if_init() is only called
once when we ifconfig an interface up, but the end result seems a
little bogus: the change of the IFF_UP flag should be propagated
down to the driver before calling any other ioctl() that might actually
require the hardware to be up and running.
device is open. This allows certain old and rather special dual
floppy controllers to work on both channels, as long as you only
have one open at a time.
this more accurately reflects what the underlying hardware of most
acpi machines that don't have children pci busses.
We still need a better way to get this information from acpi/hardware.
- Remove recursive locking situations. Remove the MTX_RECURSE bit.
- Take the lock for any routine which is not called from within if_vr.c
itself; this includes entry points called by newbus, ifnet, callout,
ifmedia, and polling subsystems.
- Remove spl references from the code added to miibus callbacks in rev 1.60.
- Add the INTR_MPSAFE bit.
- Tidy up some assignments; locks are not needed for taking the address
of something at a known offset, for example.
- Tested on the machine this was committed from.
Tested on: UP only, !debug.mpsafenet && debug.mpsafenet
Reviewed by: rwatson
Put some braces around the busy-wait loop in vr_rxeoc() to make the
no-op semicolon more obvious.
No functional changes.
Running on the machine I am committing from without problems.
Reviewed by: jmallett
header pointer and then casting it to the ecdt pointer. This fixes the
-O2 build. I'm unsure what changed recently to reveal this error since
this code has been unchanged for months.
following drivers: bfe(4), em(4), fxp(4), lnc(4), tun(4), de(4) rl(4),
sis(4) and xl(4)
More patches are pending on: http://peoples.freebsd.org/~mlaier/ Please take
a look and tell me if "your" driver is missing, so I can fix this.
Tested-by: many
No-objection: -current, -net
rev. 1.68, author: mycroft
Ignore a port error that happens to come in at the same time as a
connect status change. Some root hubs seem to report both.
Obtained from: NetBSD
bus interfaces. These interfaces use the FTDI chipset with different
Vendor and Product IDs.
Add two additional baud rate enumerations. The vehicle bus interfaces
use a baud rate of 2000000. Also add 3000000 as it is the other FTDI
baud divisor special case.
I've commited a slightly different patch from that provided in the PR as
I changed the matching code a bit yesterday.
Submitted by: Mike Durian <durian at shadetreesoftware.com>
PR: kern/67357
operations when the refcount doesn't protect the opens and closes. Fix
this, and don't actually let a time out happen: now ugen(4) devices do
not get freed out from under the programs with them open.
instead of a mutex so we do not unblock it in msleep(). If we do this,
another event could occur, resetting the status register since reads
reset it. While I'm here, remove the backoff approach. Instead, sleep
in 10 ms chunks for up to the configured timeout using either DELAY (if
we aren't booted yet) or tsleep.
Help from: dillon
Tested by: Andrew Thompson andy AT fud.org.nz
Unify the code to disable GPEs with the enable code. Shutdown is handled
the same way. ACPI now does all wake/sleep prep for child devices so
now they no longer need to call external functions in the suspend/resume
path. Add the flags to non-ACPI busses (i.e., pci).
This brings us into line with the standard, which requires power resources
be enabled when wake is enabled for a given device. Move the dereferencing
code into its own function, +acpi_pwr_dereference_resource().
code that was never really used. Print a message when disabling ACPI via
a quirk. Allow the user to override the blacklist decision by setting
hint.acpi.0.disabled="0". Add missing AcpiTerminate() calls; they are
needed to clean up if bailing out after AcpiInitializeSubsystem().
PCI native addressing. That means that if the HW says that using "real"
addresses instead of the hardwired legacy compat ones is allowed, we will
use them.
namespace. This is to allow decoupling of attachments from ACPI where they
need some functionality when ACPI is present but do not want to require ACPI
to always be loaded.
Add Intel Pro100Lan56 card.
Also integrate changes from Carlos Velasco. Only attch if we're a
network device (to filter out the serial devices). Also, increment
vpmatch if we match to conform to the pccard match function api.
Use bus space rather than direct inb/outb. Minor style changes while
I'm here. Extremely preliminary support for siliconix ethernet cards
(but more work is required).
The hack for setting the bus has been moved down into the cbb driver.
I've been running without this hack in my tree for so long I had
forgotten that I'd removed it :-). Please let me know if this causes
difficulty for your laptop.
starting value. This is more pedantically correct (since the handle
isn't always identical to the start of the resource) and also doesn't
access the innards of struct resource direct (which I forbid in my
tree). We need to do this for all resource types, not just ioport.
Reviewed by: njl
uhid.c (1.61), author: jdolecek
add support for USB_GET_DEVICEINFO and USB_GET_STRING_DESC ioctls,
with same meaning as for ugen(4)
usbdi_util.h (1.29), usb_quirks.c (1.50), uhid.c (1.62),
ugen.c (1.68), usb_subr.c (1.114) author: mycroft
Yes, some devices return incorrect lengths in their string
descriptors. Rather than losing, do what Windows does: just
request the maximum size, and allow a shorter response. Obsoletes
the need for UQ_NO_STRINGS, and therefore these "quirks" are removed.
usb_subr.c (1.116), author: mycroft
In the "seemed like a good idea until I found the fatal flaw"
department... Attempting to read a maximum-size string descriptor
causes my kue device to go completely apeshit. So, go back to the
original method, but allow the device to return a shorter string than
it claimed.
Obtained from: NetBSD
copies.
No current line disciplines have a dynamically changing hotchar, and
expecting to receive anything sensible during a change in ldisc is
insane so no locking of the hotchar field is necessary.
ohci.c (1.147), author: mycroft
Failure to properly mask off UE_DIR_IN from the endpoint address
was causing OHCI_ED_FORMAT_ISO and EHCI_QH_HRECL to get set
spuriously, causing rather interesting lossage.
Suddenly I get MUCH better performance with ehci...
ohci.c (1.148), author: mycroft
Adjust a couple of comments to make it clear WTF is going on.
Obtained from: NetBSD
ehci.c (1.55), ehcireg.h (1.16); author: mycroft
Set the data toggle correctly, and use EHCI_QTD_DTC. This fixes
problems with my ALi-based drive enclosure (it works now, rather
than failing to attach). Also seems to work with a GL811-based
enclosure and an ASUS enclosure with a CD-RW, on both Intel and
NEC controllers.
Note: The ALi enclosure is currently very SLOW, due to some issue
with taking too long to notice that the QTD is complete. This
requires more investigation.
ehci.c (1.56); author: mycroft
Failure to properly mask off UE_DIR_IN from the endpoint address
was causing OHCI_ED_FORMAT_ISO and EHCI_QH_HRECL to get set
spuriously, causing rather interesting lossage.
Suddenly I get MUCH better performance with ehci...
ehci.c (1.58); author: mycroft
Fix a stupid bug in ehci_check_intr() that caused use to try to
complete a transaction that was still running. Now ehci can
handle multiple devices being active at once.
ehci.c (1.59); author: enami
As the ehci_idone() now uses the variable `epipe'
unconditionally, always declare it (in other words, make this
file compile w/o EHCI_DEBUG).
ehci.c (1.60); author: mycroft
Remove comment about the data toggle being borked.
ehci.c (1.61); author: mycroft
Update comment.
ehci.c (1.62); author: mycroft
Adjust a couple of comments to make it clear WTF is going on.
ehci.c (1.63); author: mycroft
Fix an error in a debug printf().
ehci.c (1.64), ehcireg.h (1.17); author: mycroft
Further cleanup of toggle handling. Now that we use EHCI_QH_DTC,
we don't need to fiddle with the TOGGLE bit in the overlay
descriptor, so minimize how much we fuss with it.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Thanks to Sam for importing tags in a way that allowed this to be done.
Submitted by: Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@cell.sick.ru>
Also allow the sr and ar drivers to create netgraph versions of their modules.
Document the change to the ksocket node.
are currently all bad BIOS revisions that will never be able to support
ACPI. They were derived by examining which BIOS's are blacklisted by other
operating systems. Other types of quirks will be possible here as well.
Ultra2 users may want to set OFWCONS_POLL_HZ to a value of '20'.
I have left default value at '4' as higher values can consume a more
than is acceptable amount of CPU, and we don't have a consensus yet
what is an optimal value.
Submitted by: Pyun YongHyeon <yongari@kt-is.co.kr>
smp_rendezvous() to ensure we run on the BSP. This reverts rev 1.128.
Add a comment indicating that MI code should be the one that runs all
shutdown functions on the BSP with the APs halted. This should work
around problems in power off while waiting for the MI code to be improved.
actually used. For most ACPI devices this means deferring the call
until bus_alloc_resource().
- Add a function acpi_config_intr() to call BUS_CONFIG_INTR() for an
ACPI IRQ resource using the trigger mode and polarity information
stored in the ACPI resource object.
- Add a function acpi_lookup_irq_resource() to lookup the ACPI IRQ
resource that corresponds to a specified rid and new-bus resource.
- Have the ACPI PCI bridge driver call BUS_CONFIG_INTR() on interrupts
that it routes through link devices.
- Remove needactivate variable from acpi_alloc_resource() by changing the
function not modify the flags variable but just mask off RF_ACTIVE when
calling rman_reserve_resource().
Reviewed by: njl (1, an earlier version)
device associated with any PCI devices that are enumerated in the ACPI
tree when adding children to an ACPI PCI bus and remove the duplicate
ACPI-only device_t and replace the device_t associated with the handle with
the ACPI and PCI aware device_t.
Several changes:
* Implement read for ulpt.
* If the device is not opened for reading, occasionally drain any
data the printer might have (but don't hammer the printer with reads).
* Lower the buffer size to one page.
The driver seems to work with more printers now.
Obtained from: NetBSD