before calling bus_enumerate_hinted_children(9) (which is the minimum for
this to work) instead of fully probing it so later on we can just call
bus_generic_attach(9) on the parent of the miibus(4) instance. The latter
is necessary in order to work around what seems to be a bzzarre race in
newbus affecting a few machines since r227687, causing no driver being
probed for the newly added miibus(4) instance. Presumably this is the
same race that was the motivation for the work around done in r215348.
Reported and tested by: yongari
- Revert the removal of a static in r221913 in order to help compilers to
produce more optimal code.
On my hardware, "em" in netmap mode does about 1.388 Mpps
on one card (on an Asus motherboard), and 1.1 Mpps on another
card (PCIe bus). Both seem to be NIC-limited, because
i have the same rate even with the CPU running at 150 MHz.
On the "re" driver the tx throughput is around 420-450 Kpps
on various (8111C and the like) chipsets. On the Rx side
performance seems much better, and i can receive the full
load generated by the "em" cards.
"igb" is untested as i don't have the hardware.
A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client:
even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0),
the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions,
because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two.
2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers
There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap
support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common
code structure.
3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very
small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments:
in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of
the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h ,
following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making
changes less intrusive.
(Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had
comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so
i assume he is fine with it).
Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later.
"ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the
external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific
patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should
serve as a reference for other device drivers.
Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap,
the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz
on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more
aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions
in the time-critical parts of the code.
pins, rather than defaulting to 0 and 1.
This way the pin order can be reversed. It is reversed with the
TP-Link TL-WR1043nd.
Submitted by: Stefan Bethke <stb@lassitu.de>
These realtek switch PHYs speak a variant of i2c with some slightly
modified handling.
From the submitter, slightly modified now that some further digging
has been done:
The I2C framework makes a assumption that the read/not-write bit of the first
byte (the address) indicates whether reads or writes are to follow.
The RTL8366 family uses the bus: after sending the address+read/not-write byte,
two register address bytes are sent, then the 16-bit register value is sent
or received. While the register write access can be performed as a 4-byte
write, the read access requires the read bit to be set, but the first two bytes
for the register address then need to be transmitted.
This patch maintains the i2c protocol behaviour but allows it to be relaxed
(for these kinds of switch PHYs, and whatever else Realtek may do with this
almost-but-not-quite i2c bus) - by setting the "strict" hint to 0.
The "strict" hint defaults to 1.
Submitted by: Stefan Bethke <stb@lassitu.de>
It appears this device fails if sent a SYNCHRONIZE_CACHE command, so add
quirk to avoid sending it.
I will follow up with Micron on this issue, and will adjust the quirk if
necessary based on their feedback.
Reviewed by: hselasky@
According to the open firmware standard, finddevice call has to return
a phandle with value of -1 in case of error.
This commit is to:
- Fix the FDT implementation of this interface (ofw_fdt_finddevice) to
return (phandle_t)-1 in case of error, instead of 0 as it does now.
- Fix up the callers of OF_finddevice() to compare the return value with
-1 instead of 0 to check for errors.
- Since phandle_t is unsigned, the return value of OF_finddevice should
be checked with '== -1' rather than '<= 0' or '> 0', fix up these cases
as well.
Reported by: nwhitehorn
Reviewed by: raj
Approved by: raj, nwhitehorn
to known AHCI-capable chips (AMD/NVIDIA), configured for legacy emulation.
Enabled by default to get additional performance and functionality of AHCI
when it can't be enabled by BIOS. Can be disabled to honor BIOS settings if
needed for some reason.
MFC after: 1 month
control for all vr(4) controllers that support it. It's known that
old vr(4) controllers(Rhine II) does not support TX pause but Rhine
III supports both TX and RX pause.
Make TX pause really work on Rhine III by letting controller know
available RX buffers.
While here, adjust XON/XOFF parameters to get better performance
with flow control.
using member variables in softc.
While I'm here change media after setting IFF_DRV_RUNNING. This
will remove unnecessary link state handling in vr_tick() if
controller established a link immediately.
transfer statemachine. This work is about using a single
state variable instead of multiple state bits as input
for the USB statemachine to determine what to do in the
various parts of the code. No APIs towards USB device
drivers or USB host controller drivers will be changed.
MFC after: 1 month
put into suspend/shutdown. Old PCI controllers performed that
operation in firmware but for RTL8111C or newer controllers, it's
responsibility of driver. It's not clear whether the firmware of
RTL8111B still downgrades its speed to 10/100Mbps so leave it as it
was.
issues probably needing workarounds in bge(4) when brgphy(4) handles this
PHY. Letting ukphy(4) handle it instead results in a working configuration,
although likely with performance penalties.
The calibrate callout is done with the sc lock held.
This only showed up when using an older NIC (AR5212) whose
radio/phy requires the rfgain adjustment.
Pointy-hat-to: adrian
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
* Failall is now named just that.
* Add TX ok and TX fail, for aggregate frame sub-frames.
This will break athstats; a followup commit wil resolve this.
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
Because there is no reliable way to know whether RX MAC is in
stopped state, rejecting all frames would be the only way to
minimize possible races.
Otherwise it's possible to receive frames while stop command
execution is in progress and controller can DMA the frame to freed
RX buffer during that period.
This was observed on recent PCIe controllers(i.e. RTL8111F).
While this change may not be required on old controllers it
wouldn't make negative effects on old controllers. One side effect
of this change is disabling receive so driver reprograms RL_RXCFG
to receive WOL frames when it is put into suspend or shutdown.
This should address occasional 'memory modified free' errors seen
on recent RealTek controllers.
driver would ignore the first link state update if controller
already established a link such that it would have to take
additional link state handling in re_tick().
access.
While I'm here, enable WOL through magic packet but disable waking
up system via unicast, multicast and broadcast frames. Otherwise,
multicast or unicast frame(e.g. ICMP echo request) can wake up
system which is not probably wanted behavior on most environments.
This was not known as problem because RL_CFG5 register access had
not effect until this change.
The capability to wake up system with unicast/multicast frames
are still set in driver, default off, so users who need that
feature can still activate it with ifconfig(8).
one. Interestingly, these are actually the default for quite some time
(bus_generic_driver_added(9) since r52045 and bus_generic_print_child(9)
since r52045) but even recently added device drivers do this unnecessarily.
Discussed with: jhb, marcel
- While at it, use DEVMETHOD_END.
Discussed with: jhb
- Also while at it, use __FBSDID.
bit should not affect link establishment process of auto-negotiation
if manual configuration is not used, which is true in auto-negotiation.
However it seems setting this bit interfere with IP1001 PHY's
down-shifting feature such that establishing a 10/100Mbps link failed
when 1000baseT link is not available during auto-negotiation process.
Tested by: Andrey Smagin <samspeed <> mail dot ru >
Pause timer value is initialized to 0xFFFF. Controller allows just
4 different TX pause thresholds. The lowest possible threshold
value looks too aggressive so use next available threshold value.
- Remove MIIBUS statchg callback and program VGE_DIAGCTL before
initiating link establishment. Previously driver used to
program VGE_DIAGCTL after getting a link in statchg callback.
It seems the VGE_DIAGCTL register works like a kind of MII
register such that it requires setting a 'to be' mode in advance
rather than relying on resolved speed/duplex of established link.
This means the statchg callback is not needed in driver. In
addition, if there was no link at the time of media change, this
was not called at all.
- Introduce vge_ifmedia_upd_locked() to change current media to
configured one. Actual media change is performed only after PHY
reset and VGE_DIAGCTL setup.
- In WOL configuration, make sure to clear forced mode such that
controller can rely on auto-negotiation.
- Unlike most other drivers that use miibus(4), vge(4) used
controller's auto-polling feature for link state tracking via
interrupt. This came from controller's inefficient mechanism to
access MII registers. On link state change interrupt, vge(4)
used to get current link state with series of MII register
accesses. Because vge(4) already enabled auto polling, read PHY
status register to resolved speed/duplex/flow control parameters.
vge(4) still does not drive MII_TICK to reduce number of MII
register accesses which in turn means the driver does not know the
status of auto-negotiation. This was a one of long standing
issue of vge(4). Probably driver may be able to implement a timer
that keeps track of auto-negotiation state and restart
auto-negotiation when driver couldn't establish a link within a
specified period. However the controller does not provide a
reliable way to detect auto-negotiation failure so I'm not sure
whether it's worth to implement it in driver.
Alternatively driver can completely disable MII auto-polling and
let miibus(4) poll link state by driving MII_TICK. This may reduce
unnecessary overhead of stopping/restarting MII auto-polling of
controller. Unfortunately it was known that some variants of
controller does not work correctly if MII auto-polling is disabled.
This fixes panics that users have been seeing when operating in station mode,
where the interface undergoes a lot more resets then in hostap mode (ie whilst
doing channel scanning.)
Reported by: arundel, wblock@wonkity.com
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
passed over to the runtime firmware on 6050 devices. Instead let
the runtime firmware do the calibration itself. This fixes support
for the 6050 series devices.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Submitted by: kevlo
Tested by: lx, Tz-Huan Huang(earlier version)
defined and will allow consumers, willing to provide options, file and
line to locking requests, to not worry about options redefining the
interfaces.
This is typically useful when there is the need to build another
locking interface on top of the mutex one.
The introduced functions that consumers can use are:
- mtx_lock_flags_
- mtx_unlock_flags_
- mtx_lock_spin_flags_
- mtx_unlock_spin_flags_
- mtx_assert_
- thread_lock_flags_
Spare notes:
- Likely we can get rid of all the 'INVARIANTS' specification in the
ppbus code by using the same macro as done in this patch (but this is
left to the ppbus maintainer)
- all the other locking interfaces may require a similar cleanup, where
the most notable case is sx which will allow a further cleanup of
vm_map locking facilities
- The patch should be fully compatible with older branches, thus a MFC
is previewed (infact it uses all the underlying mechanisms already
present).
Comments review by: eadler, Ben Kaduk
Discussed with: kib, jhb
MFC after: 1 month