interface's MTU. Initialize such freelists with correct values.
This wasn't a problem for common MTUs (1500 and 9000) as the buffers (2048
and 9216 in size) happened to have enough spare room. I ran into it when
playing around with unusual MTUs.
MFC after: 2 weeks
re-used by the upcoming EDMA TX completion code.
Make ath_stoptxdma() public, again so the EDMA TX code can use it.
Don't check for the TXQ bitmap in the ISR when doing EDMA work as it
doesn't apply for EDMA.
make maintaining this driver from the documentation easier in the future.
This is a mostly mechanical change.
In uslcom_param(), move the zeroing of the final two fields of the
flowctrl structure outside of the "if CRTSCTS" section - not only were
they being zeroed in both the clauses, but these two fields have nothing
to do with hardware flow control anyway.
values).
- cong_drop specifies what to do on congestion: nothing, backpressure,
or drop.
- fl_pktshift specifies the padding before Ethernet payload.
- fl_pad specifies the boundary upto which to pad Ethernet payload.
- spg_len controls the length of the status page.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Add per-controller configuration (sx) and I/O (mutex) locks. The
configuration lock protects the relationship of volumes and drives
while the I/O lock protects access to the controller's registers and
the main I/O path.
- Remove some checks for M_WAITOK malloc()'s failing.
- Remove the explicit bus space tag/handle from the softc and use
bus_*() rather than bus_space_*().
- Reuse the existing new-bus sysctl context instead of creating a
new one.
- Remove compat shims for FreeBSD 4.x.
- Use pci_enable_busmaster() rather than doing it by hand, and rely
on bus_alloc_resource() to enable PCI I/O decoding.
Tested by: Mike Tancsa mike sentex net
Reviewed by: scottl (partially)
MFC after: 1 month
in SUPER-speed mode, USB 3.0.
This feature has not been tested yet, due to lack of hardware.
This feature is useful when implementing protocols like UASP,
USB attached SCSI which promises higher USB mass storage throughput.
This patch also implements support for hardware processing of endpoints
for increased performance. The switching to hardware processing
of an endpoint is done via a callback to the USB controller driver. The
stream feature is implemented like a variant of a hardware USB protocol.
USB controller drivers implementing device mode needs to be updated to
implement the new "xfer_stall" USB controller method and remove the
"xfer" argument from the "set_stall" method.
The API's toward existing USB drivers are preserved. To setup a USB transfer
in stream mode, set the "stream_id" field of the USB config structure to
the desired value.
The maximum number of BULK streams is currently hardcoded and limited to 8
via a define in usb_freebsd.h.
All USB drivers should be re-compiled after this change.
LibUSB will be updated next week to support streams mode. A new IOCTL to
setup BULK streams as already been implemented. The ugen device nodes
currently only supports stream ID zero.
The FreeBSD version has been bumped.
MFC after: 2 weeks
necessary to "do" EDMA.
It was just using the TX completion status for logging information about
the descriptor completion. Since with EDMA we don't know this without
checking the TX completion FIFO, we can't provide this information.
So don't.
Now that I understand what's going on with this, I've realised that
it's going to be quite difficult to implement a processq method in
the EDMA case. Because there's a separate TX status FIFO, I can't
just run processq() on each EDMA TXQ to see what's finished.
i have to actually run the TX status queue and handle individual
TXQs.
So:
* unmethodize ath_tx_processq();
* leave ath_tx_draintxq() as a method, as it only uses the completion status
for debugging rather than actively completing the frames (ie, all frames
here are failed);
* Methodize ath_draintxq().
The EDMA ath_draintxq() will have to take care of running the TX
completion FIFO before (potentially) freeing frames in the queue.
The only two places where ath_tx_draintxq() (on a single TXQ) are used:
* ath_draintxq(); and
* the CABQ handling in the beacon setup code - it drains the CABQ before
populating the CABQ with frames for a new beacon (when doing multi-VAP
operation.)
So it's quite possible that once I methodize the CABQ and beacon handling,
I can just drop ath_tx_draintxq() in its entirety.
Finally, it's also quite possible that I can remove ath_tx_draintxq()
in the future and just "teach" it to not check the status when doing
EDMA.
EDMA HAL hardware.
* The EDMA HAL code assumes the nexttbtt and intval values are in TU/8
units, rather than TU. For now, just "hack" around that here, at least
until I code up something to translate it in the HAL.
* Setup some different TXQ flags for EDMA hardware.
* The EDMA HAL doesn't support setting the first rate series via
ath_hal_setuptxdesc() - instead, a call to ath_hal_set11nratescenario()
is always required. So for now, just do an 11n rate series setup
for EDMA beacon frames.
This allows my AR9380 to successfully transmit beacon frames.
However, CABQ TX and all normal data frame TX and TX completion is
still not functional and will require some more significant code churn
to make work.
I was having TX hang issues, which I root caused to having the
legacy ath_hal_setupxtxdesc() called, rather than the 11n rate scenario
setup code. This meant that rate control information wasn't being
put into frames, causing the MAC to stall/hang.
* Add ATH_TXQ_FIRST() for easy tasting of what's on the list;
* Add an "axq_fifo_depth" for easy tracking of how deep the current
FIFO is;
* Flesh out the handoff (mcast, hw) functions;
* Begin fleshing out a TX ISR proc, which tastes the TX status FIFO.
The legacy hardware stuffs the TX completion at the end of the final frame
descriptor (or final sub-frame when doing aggregate.) So it's feasible
to do a per-TXQ drain and process, as the needed info is right there.
For EDMA hardware, there's a separate TX completion FIFO. So the TX
process routine needs to read the single FIFO and then process the
frames in each hardware queue.
This makes it difficult to do a per-queue process, as you'll end up with
frames in the TX completion FIFO for a different TXQ to the one you've
passed to ath_tx_draintxq() or ath_tx_processq().
Testing:
I've tested the TX queue and TX completion code in hostap mode on an
AR9380. Beacon frames successfully transmit and the completion routine
is called. Occasional data frames end up in TXQ 1 and are also
successfully completed.
However, this requires some changes to the beacon code path as:
* The AR9380 beacon configuration API is now in TU/8, rather than
TU;
* The AR9380 TX API requires the rate control is setup using a call
to setup11nratescenario, rather than having the try0 series setup
(rate/tries for the first series); so the beacon won't go out.
I'll follow this up with commits to the beacon code.
the device_detach() function doesn't block on UCOM device
drivers until the TTY handle is closed by the userspace
application. This is implemented by a postpone of the
softc free where the UCOM structures reside until the
TTY references are gone.
Discussed with: kib, ed
MFC after: 2 weeks
Extend the callback table of UCOM to include a
"ucom_free" function pointer which is called when
all refs on a UCOM super structure is gone.
Implement various helper functions to handle
refcounting and draining on the UCOM super
structure.
Implement macro which can be used in device
drivers to avoid module unload before all
pending TTY references are gone.
The UCOM API is backwards compatible after this
change and device drivers require no changes
to function with this change. Only a recompilation
of UCOM device drivers is required. The FreeBSD
version has been bumped in that regard.
Discussed with: kib, ed
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Move destruction of per-ring locks to netmap_dtor_locked to mirror the
initialization that happens in NIOCREGIF. Otherwise unloading a netmap-
capable interface that was never put into netmap mode would try to
mtx_destroy an uninitialized mutex, and panic.
- Destroy core_lock in netmap_detach, mirroring init in netmap_attach.
- Also comment out the knlist_destroy for now as there is currently no
knlist_init.
Sponsored by: ADARA Networks
Reviewed by: luigi@
CCB at a time outstanding reliable. It's not there yet, but this
is the direction to go in so might as well commit. So far,
multiple at a time CCBs work (see ISP_INTERNAL_TARGET test mode),
but it fails if there are more downstream than the SIM wants
to handle and SRR is sort of confused when this happens, plus
it is not entirely quite clear what one does if a CCB/CTIO fails
and you have more in flight (that don't fail, say) and more queued
up at the SIM level that haven't been started yet.
Some of this is driven because there apparently is no flow control
to requeue XPT_CONTINUE_IO requests like there are for XPT_SCSI_IO
requests. It is also more driven in that the few target mode
periph drivers there are are not really set up for handling pushback-
heck most of them don't even check for errors (and what would they
really do with them anyway? It's the initiator's problem, really....).
The data transfer arithmetic has been worked over again to handle
multiple outstanding commands, so you have a notion of what's been
moved already as well as what's currently in flight. It turns that
this led to uncovering a REPORT_LUNS bug in the ISP_INTERNAL_TARGET
code which was sending back 24 bytes of rpl data instead of the
specified 16. What happened furthermore here is that sending back
16 bytes and reporting an overrun of 8 bytes made the initiator
(running FC-Tape aware f/w) mad enough to request, and keep
requesting, another FCP response (I guess it didn't like the answer
so kept asking for it again).
Sponsored by: Spectralogic
MFC after: 1 month
Starting or stopping the IPMI watchdog is rather expensive with the
current implementation as all IPMI requests are bounced via thread.
This is not viable during shutdown or dumps, and this avoids headache
in the common case that the watchdog is not enabled. The IPMI watchdog
should probably be reworked to not use a separate thread to fix this
in the case when the watchdog timer is enabled.
MFC after: 2 weeks
packet delivery, always enqueue when possible. Also
correct the DEPLETED test as multiple bits might be
set. Thanks to Randall Stewart for the changes!
on the secondary side of a bridge will not be propagated to the primary
bus unless this is enabled. Busmastering is not enabled by default (we
have relied on firmware to set this bit to date). The OS needs to set it
for any bridges not configured by system firmware.
Tested by: Steve Polyack korvus comcast net
MFC after: 2 weeks
'fw_hdr_intfver' into an anonymous enum, which avoids a clang 3.2
warning about all the enum values being the same value.
Reviewed by: np
MFC after: 1 week
When issuing a non-DMA command, make sure to set the "remaining length of
command to be transferred via DMA" (sc_cmdlen) to zero up-front, otherwise
we might get confused on command competition interrupt (no DMA active but
still data left to transfer).
- Implement handling of MSG_IGN_WIDE_RESIDUE which some targets produce, as
just rejecting these leads to a resend and disconnect loop.
Reported and tested by: mjacob
MFC after: 3 days