relying on what the register defaults are.
This forces the blink mode to be proportional to the TX and RX frames
which match the RX filter.
This (along with a few tweaks to if_ath_led.c to configure the correct
GPIO pins) allows my DWA-552 AR5416 NIC to blink the LEDs in a useful
fashion, however those LEDs are marked "Link" and "Act(ivity)", which
don't really map well to the "power" / "network" LED interface which
the MAC provides. Some further tinkering is needed to see what other
useful operating modes are possible.
state from correctly updating things.
The reference driver directly enables/disables the LED state as required,
rather than nailing it up like it currently is. That'll have to come
later by adding some further HAL methods.
Obtained from: Atheros
* Bring the AR5416 GPIO mux mask code in line with the code from the
HAL.
* Add HAL_DEBUG_GPIO debugging statements, to track what's going on.
* Add Kiwi GPIO specific changes for reading values back.
Obtained from: Atheros
* As a preparation for AR9287 GPIO support, add in the AR9287 GPIO mask.
* Fix the association mask values; these are post-shift values but were
being shifted in twice. This resulted in some garbage being written
in the wrong place and the link LED (at least on my d-link AR5416
NIC) giving totally incorrect blink patterns.
There's currently no public code which uses this feature and the
current reference driver doesn't enable this feature at all.
It's possible it was used by a previous version of the driver and
that indeed it should return HAL_STATUS; but at this point I'm
happy to require that they complain and submit a patch.
This was found by LLVM compile-time type checking.
Submitted by: dim
and sys/dev/ath/ath_hal/ar5416/ar5416_misc.c:
sys/dev/ath/ath_hal/ar5212/ar5212_misc.c:577:24: warning: implicit conversion from enumeration type 'HAL_STATUS' to different enumeration type 'HAL_BOOL' [-Wconversion]
return HAL_EINVAL;
~~~~~~ ^~~~~~~~~~
and:
sys/dev/ath/ath_hal/ar5416/ar5416_misc.c:164:9: warning: implicit conversion from enumeration type 'HAL_STATUS' to different enumeration type 'HAL_BOOL' [-Wconversion]
return HAL_OK;
~~~~~~ ^~~~~~
In both cases, enums HAL_BOOL and HAL_STATUS are mixed up.
MFC after: 1 week
and sys/dev/ath/ath_hal/ar5211/ar5211_power.c:
sys/dev/ath/ath_hal/ar5210/ar5210_power.c:36:3: warning: signed shift result (0x200000000) requires 35 bits to represent, but 'int' only has 32 bits [-Wshift-overflow]
OS_REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_SCR, AR_SCR_SLE, AR_SCR_SLE_ALLOW);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
sys/dev/ath/ath_hal/ah_internal.h:472:42: note: expanded from:
(OS_REG_READ(_a, _r) &~ (_f)) | (((_v) << _f##_S) & (_f)))
^
sys/dev/ath/ah_osdep.h:127:49: note: expanded from:
(bus_space_handle_t)(_ah)->ah_sh, (_reg), (_val))
^~~~
The AR_SCR_SLE_{WAKE,SLP,NORM} values are pre-shifted in ar5210reg.h and
ar5211reg.h, while they should be unshifted, like in ar5212reg.h. Then,
when the OS_REG_RMW_FIELD() macro shifts them again, the values will
overflow, becoming effectively zero.
MFC after: 1 week
attached this way.
The AR5212 based NICs have a variety of RF frontends, so there's a linker set
which the AR5212 attach routine calls. The same framework is used for the
AR5416 and later but as there's a fixed RF frontend for each 11n NIC, it
is just directly attached.
However in the case of compiling a cut down HAL (eg _just_ AR9130 WMAC support),
the linker set ends up being empty and this causes the compile to fail.
So this is just a workaround for that - it means those users who wish an 11n
only HAL can compile the 11n chipsets and RF frontend they need, and just
"ath_ar5212" for the AR5212/AR5416 common code, and it'll just work.
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
mode configuration registers. This is apparently required for correct
behaviour, but also requires the chip to actually officially support it.
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
I need to investigate this a little closer, but it seems that in noisy
environments the NF load takes longer than 5 * DELAY(10) and this is
messing up future NF calibrations. (The background: NF calibrations
begin at the value programmed in after the load has completed, so
if this is never loaded in, the NF calibrations only ever start at
the currently calibrated NF value, rather than starting at something
high (say -50.)
More investigation about the effect on 11n RX and calibration results
are needed.
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
The AR5416 MAC (which shows up in the AR5008, AR9001, AR9002 devices) has
issues with PCI transactions on SMP machines. This work-around enforces
that register access is serialised through a (global for now) spinlock.
This should stop the hangs people have seen with the AR5416 PCI devices
on SMP hosts.
Obtained by: Linux, Atheros
to fetch the current channel busy statistics, rather than duplicating
it here.
This forms the (very crude) basis for doing basic channel surveying.
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
enabled if required by STA operation.
This quietens a lot of OFDM errors seen in hostap mode, where
there are no beacon RSSI levels to tune the dynamic range of the
baseband.
This may reduce reception range at the fringes, but does increase
stability.
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
The 5ghz hostap mode (where DFS is being done) requires ANI to be disabled
or the radar detection parameters don't work as advertised (as they're based
on signal strength level, and tweaking ANI affects the signal strangth,
dynamic range and power increase the baseband is looking for in order to
detect it as a "signal".)
Obtained from: Linux, Atheros
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
* If we fall through from an ANI command (eg because it's out of range,
or it's disabled) then fall through to the next ANI command rather then
being stuck there.
* Fix some off-by-one comparisons, meaning the final level in some parameters
were never tweaked.
Obtained from: Atheros
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
This forces a full reset of the baseband/radio and seems needed to clear
some issues (with Merlin at least) when the baseband gets confused in a
very noisy environment.
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
RX clear, RX extension clear.
This is useful for estimating channel business.
The same routines should be written for AR5210->AR5212 where appopriate.
Obtained from: Atheros
some unmerged interrupt status debugging code from my branch.
* Add ah_intrstate[8] which will have the record of the last
call to ath_hal_getintr().
* Wrap the KTR code behind ATH_KTR_INTR_DEBUG.
* Add the HAL interrupt debugging behind AH_INTERRUPT_DEBUGGING.
This is only done for the AR5416 and later NICs but it will be
trivial to add to the earlier NICs if required.
Neither are enabled by default, although to minimise HAL binary
API differences, the ah_intrstate[] array is always compiled into
the ath_hal struct.
* preserve AR_TxIntrReq on every descriptor in an aggregate chain,
not just the first descriptor;
* always blank out the descriptor in ar5416ChainTxDesc() when forming
aggregates - the way I'm using this in the 11n branch is to first
chain aggregates together, then use the other HAL calls to fill in
the details.
* Add the TID field in the TX status descriptor;
* Add in the 11n first/middle/last functions for fiddling
with the descriptors. These are from the Linux and the
reference driver, but I'm not (currently) using them.
* Add further AR_ISR_S5 register definitions.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k, Atheros
interfere with traffic, as the NF load can take quite a while and poking the
AGC every 10uS is just a bit silly.
Instead, just leave the baseband NF calibration where it is and just read it
back next time a longcal interval happens.
The final missing bit here is enabling the PCI configuration register
read, but there's currently no glue available for the HAL to read (and
write) PCI configuration space registers.
Obtained from: Atheros
The AR5008/AR9001 series NICs have a bug where BB register reads
will occasionally be corrupted. This could cause issues with things
such as ANI, which adjust operational parameters based on the
BB radio register reads. This was introduced in the AR5008 chip
and fixed with the first released AR9002 series NIC (AR9280v2.)
A followup commit will implement the acutal WAR when reading
BB registers. I'm still not sure how I'll implement it - whether
it should be done in the osdep layer, or whether it should just
live in the AR5416 HAL. Either way, they can use this capability
bit to determine whether to implement the WAR or not.
Thankyou to various sources inside Atheros who have helped me track
down what this particular issue is.
Obtained from: Atheros
Pre-11n devices and AR5416 use AR_PHY(263) for current RX RSSI.
AR9130 and later have a fourth calibration register (for doing
ADC calibration) and thus the register has moved to AR_PHY(271).
This isn't currently used by any of the active code; I'm committing
this for completeness and in case any third party code attempts to
use it for legacy reasons.
* The AR_ISR_RAC interrupt processing method has a subtle bug in all
the MAC revisions (including pre-11n NICs) until AR9300v2.
If you're unlucky, the clear phase clears an update to one of the
secondary registers, which includes TX status.
This shows up as a "watchdog timeout" if you're doing very low levels
of TX traffic. If you're doing a lot of non-11n TX traffic, you'll
end up receiving a TX interrupt from some later traffic anyway.
But when TX'ing 11n aggregation session traffic (which -HEAD isn't yet
doing), you may find that you're only able to TX one frame (due to
BAW restrictions) and this may end up hitting this race condition.
The only solution is to not use RAC and instead use AR_ISR and the
AR_ISR_Sx registers. The bit in AR_ISR which represents the secondary
registers are not cleared; only the AR_ISR_Sx bits are. This way
any updates which occur between the read and subsequent write will
stay asserted and (correctly) trigger a subsequent interrupt.
I've tested this on the AR5416, AR9160, AR9280. I will soon test
the AR9285 and AR9287.
* The AR_ISR TX and RX bits (and all others!) are set regardless of
whether the contents of the AR_IMR register. So if RX mitigation is
enabled, RXOK is going to be set in AR_ISR and it would normally set
HAL_INT_RX.
Fix the code to not set HAL_INT_RX when RXOK is set and RX mitigation
is compiled in. That way the RX path isn't prematurely called.
I would see:
* An interrupt would come in (eg a beacon, or TX completion) where
RXOK was set but RXINTM/RXMINT wasn't;
* ath_rx_proc() be called - completing RX frames;
* RXINTM/RXMINT would then fire;
* ath_rx_proc() would then be called again but find no frames in the
queue.
This fixes the RX mitigation behaviour to not overly call ath_rx_proc().
* Start to flesh out more correct timer interrupt handling - it isn't
kite/merlin specific. It's actually based on whether autosleep support
is enabled or not.
This is sourced from my 11n TX branch and has been tested for a few weeks.
Finally, the interrupt handling change should likely be implemented
for AR5210, AR5211 and AR5212.