The offsets didn't match the assumption that nfarray[] is ordered by the
chainmask bits and programmed via the register order in ar5416_cca_regs[].
This repairs that damage and ensures that chain 1 is programmed correctly.
(And extension channels will now be programmed correctly also.)
This fixes some of the stuck beacons I've been seeing on my AR9160/AR5416
setups - because Chain 1 would be programmed -80 or -85 dBm, which is
higher than the actual noise floor and thus convincing the radio that
indeed it can't ever transmit.
uses of ic_curchan occur. Due to the nature of a scan, switching
channels constantly and all this happening without any kind of locks
held, it might happen that ic_curchan points to nowhere leading to
panics. Fix this by not allowing frame injections while in SCAN state.
Tested by: Paul B. Mahol <onemda at gmail.com>
If multiple networks are available the max bandwidth is one
condition used for selecting the "best" BSS. To achieve that
we should consider all parameters which affect the max RX rate.
This includes 20/40MHz, SGI and the of course the MCS set.
If the TX MCS parameters are available we should use those,
because an AP announcing support for receiving frames at 450Mbps
might only be able to transmit at 150Mbps (1T3R). I haven't seen
devices with support for transmitting at higher rates then
receiving, so prefering TX over RX information should be safe.
While here, remove the hardcoded assumption that MCS15 is the max
possible MCS rate, use MCS31 instead which really is the highest
rate (according to the 802.11n std). Also, fix a mismatch of an
40MHz/SGI check.
Contrary to the rateset information in legacy frames the MCS Set
field also contains TX capability information in cases where the
number of available TX and RX spartial streams differ. Because a
rateset doesn't contain that information we have to pull the
those directly from the hardware capabilities.
Get rid of the assumption that every device is capable of 40MHz,
SGI and 2 spartial streams. Instead of printing, in the worst case,
8 times 76 MCS rates, print logically connect ranges and the
support RX/TX streams.
A device without 40MHz and SGI support looks like:
ath0: 2T2R
ath0: 11na MCS 20Mhz
ath0: MCS 0-7: 6.5Mbps - 65Mbps
ath0: MCS 8-15: 13Mbps - 130Mbps
ath0: 11ng MCS 20Mhz
ath0: MCS 0-7: 6.5Mbps - 65Mbps
ath0: MCS 8-15: 13Mbps - 130Mbps
Initialize ic_rxstream/ic_txstream with 2, for compatibility reasons.
Introduce 4 new HTC flags, which are used in addition to ic_rxstream
and ic_txstream to compute the hc_mcsset content and also for initializing
ni_htrates. The number of spatial streams is enough to determine support
for MCS0-31 but not for MCS32-76 as well as some TX parameters in the
hc_mcsset field.
rather than duplicating them for the v14 (ar5416+) and v4k (ar9285) codebases.
Further chipsets (eg the AR9287) have yet another EEPROM format which will use
these routines to calculate things.
to the TX closed-loop power control registers.
* Modify a couple of functions to take the register chain number,
rather than the regChainOffset value. This allows for the
register chain to be logged.
i386 and amd64. This involved moving the memstick generation script to
the arch directories from scripts/, in analogy to mkisoimages.sh. This
script was never called from /usr/src/release/Makefile, so that hasn't
been updated.
to repeatedly read the conf files. Depending on what is enabled the
files are being read anywhere from 15, 30, or more times currently.
By loading the values in the environment this is reduced to 1, with
perhaps a couple more, again depending on what is enabled.
The speed-up for boot and shutdown is negligible when rc.conf is
on local disk, noticable when accessing files over NFS, and dramatic
when pulling rc.conf values from a database.
This change also includes a minor optimization to the conditional
for $_rc_conf_loaded.
with r219571 and re-enable building of cbrtl.
Implement the long double version for the cube root function, cbrtl.
The algorithm uses Newton's iterations with a crude estimate of the
cube root to converge to a result.
Reviewed by: bde
Approved by: das
callers. This also fixes a problem when the prison call could set
the inp->in6p_laddr (laddr) and a following priv_check_cred() call
would return an error and will allow us to merge the IPv4 and IPv6
implementation.
MFC after: 2 weeks
behavior, where the module checks that the supplicant is a member of the
required group. The latter checks the target user instead. If neither
option was specified, pam_group(8) assumes "ruser" and issues a warning.
I intend to eventually change the default to "luser" to match the
behavior of similarly-named service modules in other operating systems.
MFC after: 1 month
even after dropping the reference and unlocking. Previously we
have dereferenced a NULL pointer (after r121765).
Simply unlocking after the block does not work either because of
lock ordering (see r121765) and in addition we would still hold
a pointer to something that might be gone by the time we access it.
Thus take a copy of the value rather than just caching the pointer.
PR: kern/151908
Submitted by: chenyl (netstar2008 126.com) (initial version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Add systrace_linux32 and systrace_freebsd32 modules which provide
support for tracing compat system calls in addition to native system
call tracing provided by systrace module.
Provided that all the systrace modules are loaded now you can select
what syscalls to trace in the following manner:
syscall::xxx:yyy - work on all system calls that match the specification
syscall:freebsd:xxx:yyy - only native system calls
syscall:linux32:xxx:yyy - linux32 compat system calls
syscall:freebsd32:xxx:yyy - freebsd32 compat system calls on amd64
PR: kern/152822
Submitted by: Artem Belevich <fbsdlist@src.cx>
Reviewed by: jhb (earlier version)
MFC after: 3 weeks