- Don't call xpt_free_path() in os_query_remove_device() and
always return TRUE.
- Update os_buildsgl() to support build logical SG table which
will be used by lower RAID module.
- Return CAM_SEL_TIMEOUTstatus for SCSIcommand failed as target
missing.
Many thanks to HighPoint for providing this driver update.
Submitted by: Steve Chang
Reviewed by: mav
MFC after: 3 days
In particular, don't check the value of the bus_dma map against NULL
to determine if either bus_dmamem_alloc() or bus_dmamap_load() succeeded.
Instead, assume that bus_dmamap_load() succeeeded (and thus that
bus_dmamap_unload() should be called) if the bus address for a resource
is non-zero, and assume that bus_dmamem_alloc() succeeded (and thus
that bus_dmamem_free() should be called) if the virtual address for a
resource is not NULL.
In many cases these bugs could result in leaks when a driver was detached.
Reviewed by: yongari
MFC after: 2 weeks
don't create a map before calling bus_dmamem_alloc() (such maps were
leaked). It is believed that the extra destroy of the map was generally
harmless since bus_dmamem_alloc() often uses special maps for which
bus_dmamap_destroy() is a no-op (e.g. on x86).
Reviewed by: scottl
shutdown by putting the former under !rebooting and turning the latter into
debug messages.
Reviewed by: hps
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Bally Wulff Games & Entertainment GmbH
- Use the existing vbus locks instead of Giant for the CAM sim lock.
- Use callout(9) instead of timeout(9).
- Mark the interrupt handler as MPSAFE.
- Don't attempt to pass data in the softc from probe() to attach().
Reviewed by: Steve Chang <ychang@highpoint-tech.com>
Assisted by: delphij
* The way rings are updated changed with the last API bump.
Also sync ->head when moving slots in netmap_sw_to_nic().
* Remove a crashing selrecord() call.
* Unclog the logic surrounding netmap_rxsync_from_host().
* Add timestamping to RX host ring.
* Remove a couple of obsolete comments.
Submitted by: Franco Fichtner
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Packetwerk
Apparently for VMware Fusion (and presumably VMware Workstation/Player
since the PR states TSO is broken there too, but I cannot test), the
TCP header pseudo checksum calculated should only include the protocol
(IPPROTO_TCP) value, not also the lengths as the stack does instead.
VMware ESXi seems to ignore whatever value is in the TCP header checksum,
and it is a bit surprising there is a different behavior between the
VMware products. And it is unfortunate that on ESXi we are forced to do
this extra bit of work.
PR: kern/185849
MFC after: 3 days
on USB HUBs by moving the code into the USB explore threads. The
deadlock happens because child devices of the USB HUB don't have the
expected reference count when called from outside the explore
thread. Only the HUB device itself, which the IOCTL interface locks,
gets the correct reference count.
MFC after: 3 days
- Revert r265427. It appears we are halting the DWC OTG host
controller schedule if we process events only at every SOF. When doing
split transactions we rely on that events are processed quickly and
waiting too long might cause data loss.
- We are not always able to meet the timing requirements of interrupt
endpoint split transactions. Switch from INTERRUPT to CONTROL endpoint
type for interrupt endpoint events until further, hence CONTROL
endpoint events are more relaxed, reducing the chance of data
loss. See comment in code for more in-depth explanation.
- Simplify TT scheduling.
MFC after: 3 days
- Remove double buffering interrupt and isochronous traffic via the
transaction translator. It can be avoided because the DWC OTG will
always delay the start split transactions for interrupt and
isochronous traffic, but will not delay the complete split
transactions, if we set the odd frame bit correctly.
- Need to check the transfer cache field in the device done function
to be sure all allocated channels are freed and not the transfer first
one. This seems to resolve the control endpoint transfer type quirk
which is now removed.
- Make sure any received data upon TX is dumped else RX path will
stop.
- Transmit isochronous data before receiving isochronous data as a
means to optimise the TT schedule.
- Implement a simple TT bandwidth scheduler.
- Cleanup use of old "td->error" variable.
- On interrupt IN traffic via the transaction translator we simply
ignore missed transfer opportunities and silently retry the
transaction upon next available time slot.
MFC after: 3 days
"Terminus BSD Console" is a derivative of Terminus that is provided
by Mr. Dimitar Zhekov under the 2-clause BSD license for use by the FreeBSD vt(4) console.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Properly align temporary buffer to 32-bit.
- Add an extra parenthesis to make expression clear.
- Range check the association ID received from hardware.
MFC after: 1 week
A similar fix should be applied to vmxnet, ixgbe, igb, i40e.
(some of them previously reported by Michael Tuexen)
Drivers using if_transmit are correct, and so are most of the
other drivers that reassing if_transmit.
Among other things, this bug causes panics when using netmap emulation
on top of generic drivers.
Approved by: bryanv
MFC after: 3 days
Core i7 and Westmere processors, the uncore PMC subsystem is
completely different from the uncore PMC on smaller versions of CPUs.
Disable existing uncore hwpmc code for EX, otherwise non-existing MSRs
are accessed.
The cores PMCs seems to be identical for non-EX and EX, according to
the SDM.
Reviewed by: davide, fabient
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
- The R92S_TCR register is an 8-bit register. Don't access it like a
16-bit register.
- Disable parsing the delete station event, due to many false events.
- Ensure that there is only one transfer queue for each endpoint, so
that packets transmitted don't get out of order.
MFC after: 1 week
o Always init locks and cv ASAP.
o Initialize driver-independent parts even if driver probing fail.
o Allow to call vt_upgrade anytime, for later loaded drivers.
o New window flag VWF_READY, to track if window already initialized.
Other updates:
o Pass vd as a cookie for kbd_allocate.
o Do not blank window on driver replacement.
Tested by: hselasky (RPi), emaste(VGA, EFIFB, KMS), me
MFC after: 7 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
interface allows the ifnet structure to be defined as an opaque
type in NIC drivers. This then allows the ifnet structure to be
changed without a need to change or recompile NIC drivers.
Put differently, NIC drivers can be written and compiled once and
be used with different network stack implementations, provided of
course that those network stack implementations have an API and
ABI compatible interface.
This commit introduces the 'if_t' type to replace 'struct ifnet *'
as the type of a network interface. The 'if_t' type is defined as
'void *' to enable the compiler to perform type conversion to
'struct ifnet *' and vice versa where needed and without warnings.
The functions that implement the API are the only functions that
need to have an explicit cast.
The MII code has been converted to use the driver API to avoid
unnecessary code churn. Code churn comes from having to work with
both converted and unconverted drivers in correlation with having
callback functions that take an interface. By converting the MII
code first, the callback functions can be defined so that the
compiler will perform the typecasts automatically.
As soon as all drivers have been converted, the if_t type can be
redefined as needed and the API functions can be fix to not need
an explicit cast.
The immediate benefactors of this change are:
1. Juniper Networks - The network stack implementation in Junos
is entirely different from FreeBSD's one and this change
allows Juniper to build "stock" NIC drivers that can be used
in combination with both the FreeBSD and Junos stacks.
2. FreeBSD - This change opens the door towards changing ifnet
and implementing new features and optimizations in the network
stack without it requiring a change in the many NIC drivers
FreeBSD has.
Submitted by: Anuranjan Shukla <anshukla@juniper.net>
Reviewed by: glebius@
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Reorganize the previous contexts of the file as it is in Linux. The
eventual goal is to install the header files and share them between
the kernel and bhyve.
MFC after: 1 week
At attach, print the SCL and SDA pin numbers.
Remove a stray blank line.
Remove the GPIOBUS locking from gpioiic_reset(), it is already called with
this lock held. This fixes a crash when you try to scan the iicbus with
i2c(8).
get_scatter_segment() in get_fl_payload() fails. While here,
fix the code to adjust fl_bufs_used when a failure occurs for
any other scatter segment.
MFC after: 3 days
If a vt(4) font does not exactly fit the screen dimensions, the console
window is offset so that it is centered. A rectangle is drawn at the
top, left, right, and bottom of the screen, to erase any leftovers that
are outside of the new usable console area.
If the x offset or y offset is 0 then the left border or top border
respectively is not drawn. The right and bottom borders may be one
pixel larger than necessary due to rounding, and are always drawn.
Prior to this change a 0 offset would result in a panic when calling
vt_drawrect with an x or y coordinate of -1.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
vt_grow may be called with a new size that's larger than previous but
does not require reallocation - for example, when the number of columns
is the same and new number of rows is less than the history size.
Prior to this change we would fail to update vb_scr_size, and then hit
a KASSERT when trying to write to the newly visible rows.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Update FDT file for BERI DE4 boards.
- Add needed kernel configuration keywords.
- Rename module to saf1761otg so that the device unit number does not
interfere with the hardware ID in dmesg.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
- Use an interrupt filter for handling the data path interrupts. This
increases the throughput significantly.
- Implement support for USB suspend and resume in USB host mode.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
- Make the USB hardware skip PTDs which are not allocated.
- Peek host memory twice. Sometimes the PTD status is incorrectly
returned as zero.
- Ensure the host channel is always freed when software TD
is completing.
- Add correct configuration of interrupt polarity and type.
- Set CERR to 2 for asynchronous traffic to avoid having to
reactivate the PTD when a NAK token is received.
- Fix detection of STALL PID.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
physical addresses.
- Nuke the unused softc of emujoy(4).
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Bally Wulff Games & Entertainment GmbH
- Based on actual usage and on what Linux does, dummy_page.addr should
contain the physical bus address of the dummy page rather than its
virtual one. As a side-effect, correcting this bug fixes compilation
with PAE support enabled by getting rid of an inappropriate cast.
- Also based on actual usage of dummy_page.addr, theoretically Radeon
devices could do a maximum of 44-bit DMA. In reality, though, it is
more likely that they only support 32-bit DMA, at least that is what
radeon_gart_table_ram_alloc() sets up for, too. However, passing ~0
to drm_pci_alloc() as maxaddr parameter translates to 64-bit DMA on
amd64/64-bit machines. Thus, use BUS_SPACE_MAXSIZE_32BIT instead,
which the existing 32-bit DMA limits within the drm2 code spelled as
0xFFFFFFFF should also be changed to.
Reviewed by: dumbbell
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Bally Wulff Games & Entertainment GmbH
- Switch from timeout() to callout_*() for per-request timers.
- Use device_find_child() in the identify routine.
- Use device_printf() instead of passing device_get_nameunit() to
printf().
- Expand the SBP_LOCK coverage simplifying the locking.
- Uninline STAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE().
Tested by: sbruno
Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take
over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both
simultaneously.
For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface
(note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N>
interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really
are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own
L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You
should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for.
With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port
of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now.
Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in
progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case
the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card
at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested.
trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43🆎cd:ef
881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0
881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0
881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0
881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000
Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus.
10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43🆎cd:ef)
881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s
881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset
884.088516 main [1886] Ready...
884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1
884.088607 sender_body [996] start
884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy
885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec)
886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec)
887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec)
888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec)
889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec)
890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec)
891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec)
892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec)
893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec)
894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec)
895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec)
896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec)
...
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
uart2: <Intel AMT - PM965/GM965 KT Controller> port 0x1830-0x1837
mem 0xfe024000-0xfe024fff irq 17 at device 3.3 on pci0
uart2: console (115200,n,8,1)
Tested as tty and serial console. Seems "fine"
- Put "_LE_" into the register access macros to indicate little endian
byte order is expected by the hardware.
- Avoid using the bounce buffer when not strictly needed. Try to move
data directly using bus-space functions first.
- Ensure we preserve the reserved bits in the power down mode
register. Else the hardware goes into a non-recoverable state.
- Always use 32-bit access when writing or reading registers or FIFOs,
because the hardware is 32-bit oriented and don't really understand 8-
and 16-bit access.
- Correct writes to the memory address register. There is no need to
shift the register offset.
- Correct interval for interrupt endpoints.
- Optimise 90ns internal memory buffer read delay.
- Rename PDT into PTD, which is how the datasheet writes it.
- Add missing programming for activating host controller PTDs.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Idle priority is not even time-share, so if system is busy in any way,
those events may never be executed. Since in some cases system waits
for events processed by that thread, that may cause deadlocks.
"fatal firmware error" happens. Previously it was neccessary to reset
it manually, using "/etc/rc.d/netif restart".
Approved by: adrian@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
"fatal firmware error" happens. Previously it was neccessary to reset
it manually, using "/etc/rc.d/netif restart".
Approved by: adrian@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
direction isochronous transfers.
- Remove setting of fields which does not belong to the respective
TRBs. These fields are currently set as zero and this is more a
cosmetic change.
MFC after: 3 days
Submitted by: Horse Ma <HMa@wyse.com>
- Make sure TX/RX lists don't leak and are only allocated once.
- Fix off-by one transfer index computation.
- Give firmware loading more time.
MFC after: 3 days
be a race when using a single active queue for all transmit types.
- Last argument of usb_pause_mtx() is ticks and not milliseconds.
- Remove unused watchdog.
- Remove some unused fields from the RSU softc structure.
- Workaround usbd_transfer_start() recursion from inside of completion
callback.
MFC after: 3 days
- Need to set the pre-fetch memory address when reading the host memory.
- We currently assume that no endianness conversion is needed.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
ismt(4) supports the SMBus Message Transport controller found on Intel
C2000 series (Avoton) and S1200 series (Briarwood) Atom SoCs.
Sponsored by: Intel
Intel 40G Ethernet Controller XL710 Family. This is
the core driver, a VF driver called i40evf, will be
following soon. Questions or comments to myself or
my co-developer Eric Joyner. Cheers!
- Implement support for interrupt filters in the DWC OTG driver, to
reduce the amount of CPU task switching when only feeding the FIFOs.
- Add common spinlock to the USB bus structure.
MFC after: 2 weeks
platform code, it is expected these will be merged in the future when the
ARM code is more complete.
Until more boards can be tested only use this with the Raspberry Pi and
rrename the functions on the other SoCs.
Reviewed by: ian@
it doesn't leak through when the command structure is reused for a user
command without a data buffer.
PR: amd64/189668
Tested by: Pete Long <pete@nrth.org>
MFC after: 1 week
Previously only TX IP checksum offloading was disabled but it's
reported that TX checksum offloading for UDP datagrams with IP
options also generates corrupted frames. Reporter's controller is
RTL8168CP but I guess RTL8168C also have the same issue since it
shall share the same core.
Reported and tested by: tuexen
the main processing queue, clear the NAK counter for any associated
BULK or CONTROL transfers and poll the endpoint(s) for 1 millisecond
at 125us rate interval, before going into slow, 10ms, NAK polling mode
again. This has the effect that typical ping-ping protocols respond
quicker when initiated from the USB host.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The last obstacle to switching PowerPC entirely to vt is that the Playstation 3
framebuffer driver needs to be ported over. This only applies for powerpc64,
however.
on my G4 iBook by more than half. Still 10% slower than syscons, but that's
much better than a factor of 2.
The slowness had to do with pathological write performance on 8-bit
framebuffers, which are almost universally used on Open Firmware systems.
Writing 1 byte at a time, potentially nonconsecutively, resulted in many
extra PCI write cycles. This patch, in the common case where it's writing
one or several characters in an 8x8 font, gangs the writes together into
a set of 32-bit writes. This is a port of r143830 to vt(4).
The EFI framebuffer is also extremely slow, probably for the same reason,
and the same patch will likely help there.
This driver supports the low and high precision models (9 and 11 bits) and
it will auto-detect the both variants.
The driver expose the temperature registers (actual temperature, shutdown
and hysteresys temperature) and also the configuration register.
It was tested on FDT systems: RPi, BBB and on non-FDT systems: AR71xx, with
both, hardware i2c controllers (when available) and gpioiic(4).
This provides a simple and cheap way for verifying the i2c bus on embedded
systems.
- For non-periodic traffic we only need to wait two SOFs before
disabling the channel.
- Make sure we release the TX FIFO tracking level after the host
channel is disabled.
- Make sure the host channel state gets reset/disabled initially.
- Two minor code style changes.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Rework how we allocate and free USB host channels, so that we only
allocate a channel if there is a real packet going out on the USB
cable.
- Use BULK type for control data and status, due to instabilities in
the HW it appears.
- Split FIFO TX levels into one for the periodic FIFO and one for the
non-periodic FIFO.
- Use correct HFNUM mask when scheduling host transactions. The HFNUM
register does not count the full 16-bit range.
- Correct START/COMPLETION slot for TT transactions. For INTERRUPT and
ISOCHRONOUS type transactions the hardware always respects the ODDFRM
bit, which means we need to allocate multiple host channels when
processing such endpoints, to not miss any so-called complete split
opportunities.
- When doing ISOCHRONOUS OUT transfers through a TT send all data
payload in a single ALL-burst. This deacreases the likelyhood for
isochronous data underruns.
- Fixed unbalanced unlock in case of "dwc_otg_init_fifo()" failure.
- Increase interrupt priority.
MFC after: 2 weeks
have implemented the PIM_NOSCAN rescan functionality will have it
enabled.
This is a no-op for head.
Reviewed by: slm
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 3 days
TLR is necessary for reliable communication with SAS tape drives.
This was broken by change 246713 in the mps(4) driver. It changed the
cm_data field for SCSI I/O requests to point to the CCB instead of the data
buffer. So, instead, look at the CCB's data pointer to determine whether
or not we're talking to a tape drive.
Also, take the residual into account to make sure that we don't go off the
end of the request.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
cards. LSI has been maintaining this driver outside of the FreeBSD
tree. It overlaps support of ThunderBolt and Invader cards that mfi(4)
supports. By default mfi(4) will attach to cards. If the tunable:
hw.mfi.mrsas_enable=1
is set then mfi(4) will not probe and attach to these newer cards and
allow mrsas(4) to attach. So by default this driver will not effect
a FreeBSD system unless mfi(4) is removed from the kernel or the
tunable is enabled.
mrsas(4) attaches disks to the CAM layer so it depends on CAM and devices
show up as /dev/daX. mfiutil(8) does not work with mrsas. The FreeBSD
version of MegaCli and StorCli from LSI do work with mrsas. It appears
that StorCli only works with mrsas. MegaCli appears to work with mfi(4)
and mrsas(4).
It would be good to add mfiutil(4) support to mrsas, emulations modes,
kernel logging, device aliases to ease the transition between mfi(4)
and mrsas(4).
Style issues should be resolved by LSI when they get committers approved.
The plan is get this driver in FreeBSD 9.3 to improve HW support.
Thanks to LSI for developing, testing and working with FreeBSD to
make this driver co-exist in FreeBSD. This improves the overall
support of MegaRAID SAS.
Submitted by: Kashyap Desai <Kashyap.Desai@lsi.com>
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: LSI
mprsas_SSU_to_SATA_devices().
This fixes an assertion on shutdown with INVARIANTS enabled with SATA
drives present on an IR firmware controller.
Reviewed by: Steve McConnell <stephen.mcconnell@avagotech.com>.
MFC after: 3 days
controller driver by piggybacking the SOF interrupt when issuing new
and checking old transfers. Number of interrupts was reduced by 30%
when doing Isochronous transfers.
Use correct GINTMSK_XXX macros when accessing the DWC OTG interrupt
mask register.
Add code to adjust the frame interval register which influences the
SOF rate.
MFC after: 2 weeks
This problem only occurs on versions of FreeBSD prior to the recent CAM
locking changes. (i.e. stable/9 and older versions of stable/10) This
change should be a no-op for head and stable/10.
If a path isn't specified, xpt_register_async() will create a fully
wildcarded path and acquire a lock (the XPT lock in older versions,
and via xpt_path_lock() in newer versions) to call xpt_action() for the
XPT_SASYNC_CB CCB. It will then drop the lock and if the requested event
includes AC_FOUND_DEVICE or AC_PATH_REGISTERED, it will get the caller up
to date with any device arrivals or path registrations.
The issue is that before the locking changes, each SIM lock would get
acquired in turn during the EDT tree traversal process. If a path is
specified for xpt_register_async(), it won't acquire and drop its own lock,
but instead expects the caller to hold its own SIM lock. That works for
the first part of xpt_register_async(), but causes a recursive lock
acquisition once the EDT traversal happens and it comes to the SIM in
question. And it isn't possible to call xpt_action() without holding a SIM
lock.
The locking changes fix this by using the XPT topology lock for EDT
traversal, so it is no longer an issue to hold the SIM lock while calling
xpt_register_async().
The solution for FreeBSD versions before the locking changes is to request
notification of all device arrivals (so we pass a NULL path into
xpt_register_async()) and then filter out the arrivals that are not ours.
MFC After: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
used.
It turns out that the RX DMA engine does the same last-descriptor-link-
pointer-re-reading trick that the TX DMA engine. That is, the hardware
re-reads the link pointer before it moves onto the next descriptor.
Thus we can't free a descriptor before we move on; it's possible the
hardware will need to re-read the link pointer before we overwrite
it with a new one.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA mode
TODO:
* more thorough AP and STA mode testing!
* test on other pre-AR9380 NICs, just to be sure.
* Break out the RX descriptor grabbing bits from the RX completion
bits, like what is done in the RX EDMA code, so ..
* .. the RX lock can be held during ath_rx_proc(), but not across
packet input.
o Declare vt(4) drivers dataset.
o Create single static structures for all early drivers.
o Add vt(4) to be by default in the kernel consoles list.
o Create one more sysinit point, to be able to initialize memory and lock
requirement of early drivers.
o Implement early drivers select. (Only best available will be selected).
o Fix one missed "return (0)" for VTYLOCK.
o Improve locking for cases when one driver replace another.
o Make driver replacement notification less debug-look-like.
Minor spell fixes.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
reflect when unmapped I/O support was added.
For FreeBSD 10, it arrived just prior to __FreeBSD_version 1000028.
For FreeBSD 9, it arrived just prior to __FreeBSD_version 902001.
Also, fix compiler warnings in mprsas_send_smpcmd() that happen in the
i386 PAE build for non-unmapped I/O builds. These were fixed in mps(4)
in revision 241145, but didn't make it into the mpr(4) driver. This
change should only affect FreeBSD versions outside the above revisions,
and thus doesn't affect head.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
speed data traffic going directly to a USB device or through a
so-called USB transaction translator.
Add checks that we are not overusing the TX FIFO.
MFC after: 2 weeks
call, which assumes the hardware is awake.
Turn ath_update_mcast() into a routine that's only called from the
net80211 layer - and it forces the hardware awake first.
This fixes a LOR from the EDMA RX path which calls ath_mode_init()
with the RX lock held - the driver lock can't also be grabbed.
This path assumes that the ath_mode_init() callers all wake up
the NIC first.
Tested:
* AR9485, STA mode, powersave
This seems to probe/attach as an AR9485 and thus nothing else besides
adding the device id seems to be required.
ath0: <Atheros AR1111> mem 0xf4800000-0xf487ffff irq 19 at device 0.0 on pci5
ath0: [HT] enabling HT modes
ath0: [HT] enabling short-GI in 20MHz mode
ath0: [HT] 1 stream STBC receive enabled
ath0: [HT] 1 RX streams; 1 TX streams
ath0: AR9485 mac 576.1 RF5110 phy 1926.8
ath0: 2GHz radio: 0x0000; 5GHz radio: 0x0000
The NIC I have here is a 1 antenna, 2GHz only device.
Thankyou to Jim Thompson <jim@netgate.com> for the AR1111 NIC.
Tested:
* AR1111 (pretending not to be an AR9485, but failing miserably);
STA mode with powersave.
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Netgate
sys/systm.h must always come after sys/param.h.
Remove sys/types.h which should never be included together with sys/param.h.
Add sys/malloc.h for correctness even if it seems to don't be needed.
Remove more unused headers found by unusedinc (from bde@) and tested with a
universe build.
Reported by: bde
This allows to run 32bit applications on a 64bit host. This was tested
successfully with Wine (emulators/i386-wine-devel) and StarCraft II.
Submitted by: Jan Kokemüller <jan.kokemueller@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
This is derived from the mps(4) driver, but it supports only the 12Gb
IT and IR hardware including the SAS 3004, SAS 3008 and SAS 3108.
Some notes about this driver:
o The 12Gb hardware can do "FastPath" I/O, and that capability is included in
this driver.
o WarpDrive functionality has been removed, since it isn't supported in
the 12Gb driver interface.
o The Scatter/Gather list handling code is significantly different between
the 6Gb and 12Gb hardware. The 12Gb boards support IEEE Scatter/Gather
lists.
Thanks to LSI for developing and testing this driver for FreeBSD.
share/man/man4/mpr.4:
mpr(4) man page.
sys/dev/mpr/*:
mpr(4) driver files.
sys/modules/Makefile,
sys/modules/mpr/Makefile:
Add a module Makefile for the mpr(4) driver.
sys/conf/files:
Add the mpr(4) driver.
sys/amd64/conf/GENERIC,
sys/i386/conf/GENERIC,
sys/mips/conf/OCTEON1,
sys/sparc64/conf/GENERIC:
Add the mpr(4) driver to all config files that currently
have the mps(4) driver.
sys/ia64/conf/GENERIC:
Add the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers to the ia64 GENERIC
config file.
sys/i386/conf/XEN:
Exclude the mpr module from building here.
Submitted by: Steve McConnell <Stephen.McConnell@lsi.com>
MFC after: 3 days
Tested by: Chris Reeves <chrisr@spectralogic.com>
Sponsored by: LSI, Spectra Logic
Relnotes: LSI 12Gb SAS driver mpr(4) added
lindev(4) was only used to provide /dev/full which is now a standard feature of
FreeBSD. /dev/full was never linux-specific and provides a generally useful
feature.
Document this in UPDATING and bump __FreeBSD_version. This will be documented
in the PH shortly.
Reported by: jkim
Adjust the exynos and zedboard dts files to use max-frequency (the
documented standard property) instead of clock-frequency.
Submitted by: Thomas Skibo <ThomasSkibo@sbcglobal.net>
The hardware can generate its own frames (eg RTS/CTS exchanges, other
kinds of 802.11 management stuff, especially when it comes to 802.11n)
and these also have PWRMGT flags. So if the VAP is asleep but the
NIC is in force-awake for some reason, ensure that the self-generated
frames have PWRMGT set to 1.
Now, this (like basically everything to do with powersave) is still
racy - the only way to guarantee that it's all actually consistent
is to pause transmit and let it finish before transitioning the VAP
to sleep, but this at least gets the basic method of tracking and
updating the state debugged.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA mode
* AR9380, STA mode
fixes and beacon programming / debugging into the ath(4) driver.
The basic power save tracking:
* Add some new code to track the current desired powersave state; and
* Add some reference count tracking so we know when the NIC is awake; then
* Add code in all the points where we're about to touch the hardware and
push it to force-wake.
Then, how things are moved into power save:
* Only move into network-sleep during a RUN->SLEEP transition;
* Force wake the hardware up everywhere that we're about to touch
the hardware.
The net80211 stack takes care of doing RUN<->SLEEP<->(other) state
transitions so we don't have to do it in the driver.
Next, when to wake things up:
* In short - everywhere we touch the hardware.
* The hardware will take care of staying awake if things are queued
in the transmit queue(s); it'll then transit down to sleep if
there's nothing left. This way we don't have to track the
software / hardware transmit queue(s) and keep the hardware
awake for those.
Then, some transmit path fixes that aren't related but useful:
* Force EAPOL frames to go out at the lowest rate. This improves
reliability during the encryption handshake after 802.11
negotiation.
Next, some reset path fixes!
* Fix the overlap between reset and transmit pause so we don't
transmit frames during a reset.
* Some noisy environments will end up taking a lot longer to reset
than normal, so extend the reset period and drop the raise the
reset interval to be more realistic and give the hardware some
time to finish calibration.
* Skip calibration during the reset path. Tsk!
Then, beacon fixes in station mode!
* Add a _lot_ more debugging in the station beacon reset path.
This is all quite fluid right now.
* Modify the STA beacon programming code to try and take
the TU gap between desired TSF and the target TU into
account. (Lifted from QCA.)
Tested:
* AR5210
* AR5211
* AR5212
* AR5413
* AR5416
* AR9280
* AR9285
TODO:
* More AP, IBSS, mesh, TDMA testing
* Thorough AR9380 and later testing!
* AR9160 and AR9287 testing
Obtained from: QCA
Some code will appear soon that is actually setting the chip powerstate
separate from the self-generated frames power state.
* Allow the AR5416 family chips to actually have the power state changed
from the self generated state change.
Tested (STA mode):
* AR5210
* AR5211
* AR5412
* AR5413
* AR5416
* AR9285
It exposes I/O resources to user space, so that programs can peek
and poke at the hardware. It does not itself have knowledge about
the hardware device it attaches to.
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
the MYBEACON RX filter (only receive beacons which match the BSSID)
or all beacons on the current channel.
* Add the relevant RX filter entry for MYBEACON.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA
* AR9285, STA
TODO:
* once the code is in -HEAD, just make sure that the code which uses it
correctly sets BEACON for pre-AR5416 chips.
Obtained from: QCA, Linux ath9k
the QCA HAL.
This fires off an interrupt if the TSF from the AP / IBSS peer is
wildly out of range. I'll add some code to the ath(4) driver soon
which makes use of this.
TODO:
* verify this didn't break TDMA!
to the hardware.
The QCA HAL has a comment noting that if this isn't done, modifications
to AR_IMR_S2 before AR_IMR is flushed may produce spurious interrupts.
Obtained from: QCA
#gpio-cells property.
Add a new ofw_bus method (OFW_BUS_MAP_GPIOS()) that allows the GPIO
controller to implement its own mapping to deal with gpio-specifiers,
allowing the decoding of gpio-specifiers to be controller specific.
The default ofw_bus_map_gpios() decodes the linux standard (#gpio-cells =
<2>) and the FreeBSD standard (#gpio-cells = <3>).
It pass the gpio-specifier flag field to the children as an ivar variable so
they can act upon.
define a few imx_ccm_foo() functions that are implemented by the imx51 or
imx6 ccm code. Of course, the imx6 ccm code is still more a wish than
reality, so for now its implementations just return hard-coded numbers.
a jtag debugging product, which was used on early Beaglebone boards (later
boards used a standard FTDI 2232C product ID). Change the name accordingly,
and also add an entry for XDS100V3, the latest version of that product
which has its own new product ID number.
Device type and revision is now determined from the bcdDevice field and
doesn't need to be in the table at all. The feature that skips creation
of /dev/ttyU* entries for jtag and gpio interfaces is enhanced:
- The feature is now optional, but enabled by default. A tunable and
sysctl are available to control it: hw.usb.uftdi.skip_jtag_interfaces.
- We no longer assume interface #0 is the only jtag interface. Up to
eight interfaces per chip can be flagged as jtag. (Current ftdi chips
support a max of 4 interfaces; this leaves room for growth.)
- Some manufacturers don't change the product ID or use the same ID for
different devices intended for both serial-comms and jtag/gpio use.
Often while the product ID is the same, the product name string is
different, so it's now possible to search for the product name in a
table of strings and get the set of non-tty interfaces from that table.
- Add a comment about FTDI and ZLPs.
- Correctly check odditiy of baud rate divisor.
- Correct IOCTL handling for "error" and "event" char.
MFC after: 1 weeks
concurrent updates from any completing transmits in other threads.
This was exposed when doing power save work - net80211 is constantly
doing reassociations and it's causing the rate control state to get
blanked out. This could cause the rate control code to assert.
This should be MFCed to stable/10 as it's a stability fix.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA
MFC after: 7 days
The MAC filter set may be called without softc_lock held in the case of
SIOCADDMULTI and SIOCDELMULTI ioctls. The ioctl handler checks IFF_DRV_RUNNING
flag which implies port started, but it is not guaranteed to remain.
softc_lock shared lock can't be held in the case of these ioctls processing,
since it results in failure where kernel complains that non-sleepable
lock is held in sleeping thread.
Both problems are repeatable on LAG with LACP proto bring up.
Submitted by: Andrew Rybchenko <Andrew.Rybchenko at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The existing cleanup code was based on the Atheros reference driver
from way back and stuff that was in Linux ath9k. It turned out to be ..
rather silly.
Specifically:
* The whole method of determining whether there's hardware-queued frames
was fragile and the BAW would never quite work right afterwards.
* The cleanup path wouldn't correctly pull apart aggregate frames in the
queue, so frames would not be freed and the BAW wouldn't be correctly
updated.
So to implement this:
* Pull the aggregate frames apart correctly and handle each separately;
* Make the atid->incomp counter just track the number of hardware queued
frames rather than try to figure it out from the BAW;
* Modify the aggregate completion path to handle it as a single frame
(atid->incomp tracks the one frame now, not the subframes) and
remove the frames from the BAW before completing them as normal frames;
* Make sure bf->bf_next is NULled out correctly;
* Make both aggregate session and non-aggregate path frames now be
handled via the incompletion path.
TODO:
* kill atid->incomp; the driver tracks the hardware queued frames
for each TID and so we can just use that.
This is a stability fix that should be merged back to stable/10.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA
MFC after: 7 days
MAC
* Now that the paused < 0 bugs have been identified, make the DPRINTF()
a device_printf() again. Anything else that shows up here needs to be
fixed immediately.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA mode
MFC after: 7 days
During power save testing I noticed that the cleanup code is being
called during a RUN->RUN state transition. It's because the net80211
stack is treating that (for reasons I don't quitey know yet) as a
reassociation and this calls the node cleanup code. The reason it's
seeing a RUN->RUN transition is because during active power save
stuff it's possible that the RUN->SLEEP and SLEEP->RUN transitions
happen so quickly that the deferred net80211 vap state code
"loses" a transition, namely the intermediary SLEEP transition.
So, this was causing the node reassociation code to sometimes be called
twice in quick succession and this would result in ath_tx_tid_cleanup()
to be called again. The code calling it would always call pause, and
then only call resume if the TID didn't have "cleanup_inprogress" set.
Unfortunately it didn't check if it was already set on entry, so it
would pause but not call resume. Thus, paused would be called more
than once (once before each entry into ath-tx_tid_cleanup()) but resume
would only be called once when the cleanup state was finished.
This doesn't entirely fix all of the issues seen in the cleanup path
but it's a necessary first step.
Since this is a stability fix, it should be merged to stable/10 at some
point.
Tested:
* AR5416, STA mode
MFC after: 7 days
NetFPGA-10G Embedded CPU Ethernet Core.
The current version operates on a simple PIO based interface connected
to a NetFPGA-10G port.
To avoid confusion: this driver operates on a CPU running on the FPGA,
e.g. BERI/mips, and is not suited for the PCI host interface.
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA/AFRL
and normal mode; this makes it possible to compile with the former
by default, but use it only when neccessary. That's especially
important for the userland part.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation