from the amr_linux. This simplifies the amr_linux shim and puts the
smarts into amr.c.
I tested this with 2 amr controllers in one box. It seems to work
okay with them.
o Properly use rman(9) to manage resources. This eliminates the
need to puc-specific hacks to rman. It also allows devinfo(8)
to be used to find out the specific assignment of resources to
serial/parallel ports.
o Compress the PCI device "database" by optimizing for the common
case and to use a procedural interface to handle the exceptions.
The procedural interface also generalizes the need to setup the
hardware (program chipsets, program clock frequencies).
o Eliminate the need for PUC_FASTINTR. Serdev devices are fast by
default and non-serdev devices are handled by the bus.
o Use the serdev I/F to collect interrupt status and to handle
interrupts across ports in priority order.
o Sync the PCI device configuration to include devices found in
NetBSD and not yet merged to FreeBSD.
o Add support for Quatech 2, 4 and 8 port UARTs.
o Add support for a couple dozen Timedia serial cards as found
in Linux.
OS dependent layer. Thus, the watchdog timer can go off when the tx
engine is working fine but the OS dependent layer just hasn't been called
to cleanup finished tx transactions. To workaround this, when the watchdog
fires, poke the binary blob to force it to flush any pending tx
completions. If this drops the pending tx count to zero then just return
without logging a message or resetting the chip.
This reportedly fixes the 'device timeout()' errors with at least several
NF4 nve(4) parts.
Submitted by: Nathan Alexander Whitehorn <nathanw@uchicago.edu> (code)
Submitted by: dg (inspiration for comment and explanation)
MFC after: 1 week
POSTWRITE to POSTREAD.
No guarantee that all busdma is usage is perfect, but this change (in
addition to scott's last two commits) makes if_bfe work with > 1GB of
memory in my laptop.
OpenBSD changes. With these changes, PHY part of the driver becomes
functional (it senses media changes and negotiates speed just fine),
previously it just hang with no PHY message, but no data goes through
interface (error message is "can not stop transfer of Tx/Rx descriptor).
Hopefully somebody with more clue/free time will be able to pick up
after me.
Changelog towards if_iwi.c 1.26 (some changes have been committed separately
in the mean time):
- add led support
- add firmware loading on demand
- auto-restart firmware when it crashes
- serialize operations sent to the firmware to reduce firmware crashes
- add power save operation support
- remove incorrect specification of tx power control capability
- add radio on/off switch support
- improve net80211 state machine operation
- recognize and handle beacon miss
- handle authentication and association failures better
- add shared key authentication
- fix ibss mode (many changes)
- fix wme (many changes)
- correct radiotap support (many changes)
- correct bus dma setup of s/g
- correct various locking issues
- fix monitor mode
- fix scanning (many changes)
- recover from wedged scan requests
- respect active channel list
- eliminate cases where interface was marked down on error
- don't treat parity errors as fatal
- reclaim mgt frames immediately from tx queue
- correct interrupt handling, ack early (from NetBSD)
- fix short/long preamble handling
Committed with RELENG_6 compat #if's, should compile in RELENG_6. Requires
net/iwi-firmware-kmod to function.
Much work done by: sam
Tested by: many (freebsd-net), ume, luigi
MFC after: 4 weeks
This driver was generously developed and donated by Highpoint.
It is enabled for i386 only at the moment. I will enable it for amd64
shortly.
Obtained from: HighPoint Technologies, Inc.
- MPSAFE. No more recursive lock required.
- bus_dma(9) conversion. I think it should work on all architectures.
- optimized Rx handler for each normal and jumbo frames. Previously
sk(4) used jumbo frame management code to handle normal sized
frames. As the handler needs an additional lock to protect jumbo
frame management structure from races, it used two lock operations
for each received packet. Now sk(4) uses single lock operation for
normal frame.(Jumbo frame still needs two lock operations as before.)
The hardware supports DMA scatter operations for Rx descriptors such
that it's possible to take advantagee of m_cljget(9) for jumbo frames.
However, due to a unknown reasons it resulted in poor performance on
sparc64. So I dropped m_cljget(9) approach. This should be revisited
since it would reduce one lock operation for jumbo frame handling.
- Tx TCP/Rx IP checksum offload support. According to the data sheet
of SK-NET GENESIS the hardware supports Rx IP/TCP/UDP offload.
But I couldn't make it work on my Yukon hardware. So Rx TCP/UDP was
disabled at the moment. It seems that newer Yukon chips can support
Tx UDP checksum offload too. But I need more documentation first.
- Added more wait time in reading VPD data. It seems that ASUS LOM
takes a very long time to respond VPD read signal.
- Added an additional lock for MII register access callbacks.
- Added more strict received packet validation routine. Previously it
passed corrupted packets to upper layers under certain conditions.
- A new function sk_yukon_tick() to handle auto-negotiation properly.
- Interrupt handler now checks shared interrupt source and protects
the interrupt handler from NULL pointer dereference which was caused
by odd status word value. The status word can returns 0xffffffff if
cable is unplugged while Rx/Tx/auto-negotiation is in progress.
- suspend/resume support(not tested).
- Added Rx/Tx FIFO flush routine for Yukon
- Activate Tx descriptor poll timer in order to protect possible loss
of SK_TXBMU_TX_START command. Previously the driver continuously issued
SK_TXBMU_TX_START when it notices pending Tx descriptors not processed
yet in interrupt handler. That approach would add additional PCI
write access overhead under high Tx load situations and it might fail
if the first SK_TXBMU_TX_START was lost and no interrupt is generated
from the first SK_TXBMU_TX_START command.
- s/printf/if_printf/, s/printf/device_printf/, Axe sk_unit in softc.
- Setting multicast/station address is now safe on strict-alignment
architectures.
- Fix long standing bug in VLAN header length setup.
- Added/corrected register definitions for Yukon.
(Register information from Linux skge driver.)
- Added Rx status definition for Marvell Yukon/XaQti XMAC.
(Rx status register information from Linux skge driver.)
- Update if_oerrors if we encounter watchdog error.
- callout(9) conversion
Special thanks to jkim who let me know RX status differences between
Yukon and XaQti XMAC.
It seems that there is still occasional watchdog timeout error but I
couldn't reproduce it and need more information to analyze it from
users.
Tested by: bz(amd64), me(i386, sparc64), current ML
Frank Behrens frank ! pinky ( sax $ de
Lower the minimum for memory mapped I/O from 32 bytes to 16 bytes.
This fixes bus enumeration on ia64 now that the Diva auxiliary
serial port is attached to.
channel number since we're not ready at the net80211 layer to deal with them;
note this mapping has to match what's done in ieee80211_mhz2ieee
MFC after: 3 days
controller as we use in boot blocks (querying status register until
bit 1 goes off). If that doesn't happed during reasonable period assume
that the hardware doesn't have AT-style keyboard controller. This makes
FreeBSD working almost OOB on MacBook Pro (still there are issues with
putting second CPU core on-line, but since installation CD comes with
UP kernel with this change one should be able to install FreeBSD without
playing tricks with hints). Other legacy-free hardware (e.g. IBM NetVista
S40) should benefit from this as well, but since I don't have any I can't
verify.
It should make no difference on the ordinary i386 hardware (since in
that case that hardware already would be having an issues with A20
routines in boot blocks). I don't know much about AT-style keyboard
controller on other platforms (and don't have dedicated access to one),
therefore, the code is restricted to i386 for now. I suspect that amd64
may need this as well, but I would rather leave this decision to someone
who knows better about the platform(s) in question.
I have tested this change on as many "ordinary i386 boxes" as I can get
my hands on, and it doesn't create any false negatives on hardware with
AT-style keyboard present.
MFC after: 1 month
This allows one to change the behavior of the driver pre-boot.
NOTE: This patch was made for DragonFly BSD by Sepherosa Ziehau.
PR: kern/94833
Submitted by: Devon H. O'Dell
Obtained from: DragonFly
MFC after: 1 month
end for isa(4).
o Add a seperate bus frontend for acpi(4) and allow ISA DMA for
it when ISA is configured in the kernel. This allows acpi(4)
attachments in non-ISA configurations, as is possible for ia64.
o Add a seperate bus frontend for pci(4) and detect known single
port parallel cards.
o Merge PC98 specific changes under pc98/cbus into the MI driver.
The changes are minor enough for conditional compilation and
in this form invites better abstraction.
o Have ppc(4) usabled on all platforms, now that ISA specifics
are untangled enough.
A slight difference of this chip from its previous siblings is that
it need a gentle "wake up" on every (full) DMA buffer completion to
avoid stalled interrupt handler.
Thanks to George Hartzell for permission on doing remote debugging.
Prime MFC candidate for 6.1-RELEASE. Please reply to this commit if
there are any objections (so I won't bug re@), since the changes
are too small and only specific to VT8251.
PR: i386/95949
Tested by: [1] George Hartzel
myself (remotely)
MFC after: 3 days
[1] http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-multimedia/2006-April/004003.html
Pull in some target mode changes from a private branch.
Pull in some more RELENG_4 compilation changes.
A lot of lines changed, but not much content change yet.