made to accommodate the chip being in promiscuous mode while
offloading VLAN tag processing to the hardware. We can now
properly handle the absence of VLAN tags from hardware stripping.
Reviewed by: rwatson, andre
MFC after: 1 month
after calling mfi_mapcmd is no longer needed, so long as the MFI_CMD_POLLED
flag is set. This change eliminates the possibility of a polled command
getting posted twice to the driver. This is turn fixes panics on shutdown
when INVARIANTS is set.
Sponsored by: Ironport
and provied an isp_control entry point so that the outer layers can
do PLOGI/LOGO explicitly. Add MS IOCB support. This completes the cycle
for base support for SMI-S.
This allows us to play nicely on SANs when we have target mode
enabled in f/w but have neither the scsi_targbh enabled or
scsi_targ with a target enabled.
accidentally truncating off the VLAN tag field in the TX descriptor. Fix
this by splitting up the vlan_tag and flags fields into separate fields,
and handling them appropriately.
Sponsored by: Ironport
MFC After: 3 days
descriptor's mbuf pointer to see if the transmit ring is full. The
mbuf pointer is set only in the last descriptor of a
multi-descriptor packet. By relying on the mbuf pointers of the
earlier descriptors, the driver would sometimes overwrite a
descriptor belonging to a packet that wasn't completed yet. Also,
tx_chain_prod wasn't updated inside the loop, causing the wrong
descriptor to be checked after the first iteration. The upshot of
all this was the loss of some transmitted packets at medium to high
packet rates.
In bce_tx_encap, remove a couple of old statements that shuffled
around the tx_mbuf_map pointers. These now correspond 1-to-1 with
the transmit descriptors, and they are not supposed to be changed.
Correct a couple of inaccurate comments.
MFC after: 1 month
Only complain about FC Reponse errors if they're nonzero.
Shorten some PortID printouts for local loop.
Add an internal isp_xcmd_t data structure which we'll use for some
CT-Passthru support as part of adding SMI-S.
- Add a translation so the Linux ioctl's don't conflict with
the FreeBSD definition.
- Assume Linux 32bit emulation on amd64.
This was tested on i386 and amd64 with the 32bit Linux MegaCli.
Eventually we should do a 32bit native FreeBSD translation app.
gone device timers and zombie state entries. There are tunables
that can be used to select a number of parameters.
loop_down_limit - how long to wait for loop to come back up before
declaring
all devices dead (default 300 seconds)
gone_device_time- how long to wait for a device that has appeared
to leave the loop or fabric to reappear (default 30 seconds)
Internal tunables include (which should be externalized):
quick_boot_time- how long to wait when booting for loop to come up
change_is_bad- whether or not to accept devices with the same
WWNN/WWPN that reappear at a different PortID as being the 'same'
device.
Keen students of some of the subtle issues here will ask how
one can keep devices from being re-accepted at all (the answer
is to set a gone_device_time to zero- that effectively would
be the same thing).
- Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers
to provide the device driver visible API:
- pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count'
here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number
of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success,
'*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on
success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources
starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will
not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate
either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and
the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note
that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the
MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function
if the device supports MSI-X.
- pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function
releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the
SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed.
- pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns
the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device.
MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the
'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function
should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return
(assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources
for all of the messages).
- Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic
PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and
OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default
implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through
the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any
needed MD setup code needed:
- PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages.
- PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages.
- PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message.
- PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message.
- Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the
request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the
default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers.
- Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X
interrupts:
- pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address
and data registers for a group of MSI messages
- pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X
message in the MSI-X table
- pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message
- pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message
- pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X
message is currently pending
- Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg
block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is
resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during
resume.
- Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields.
- Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come
across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices.
Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X)
Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv
MFC after: 2 months
our own watchdog that piggybacks on the em_local_timer() routine.
We suppose that the if_timer/if_watchdog interface should be
obsoleted, since it doesn't fit the modern SMP network stack.
NIC drivers should create their own watchdogs, that check and
clear the timers always holding driver's lock.
In collaboration with: jfv, scottl
- Only call iwi_stop() if we got far enough along in iwi_attach() to
alloc an ifnet.
- Release the firmware after stopping the interface and detaching the
ifnet.
MFC after: 1 month
Reviewed by: sam
to be switched to is saved in sc->delayed_next_scr and
the actual switch is performed later. It was possible
to get into the endless loop when attempting to switch
to a closed vty (which is not allowed and beep-alerted
when attempted) and when the visual beep was in effect.
This caused sc->delayed_next_scr to never be reset and
endless attempts to switch to a closed vty and endless
visual beeping. How to repeat:
- boot into single-user
- run "kbdcontrol -b visual"
- quickly press Alt+F2 two times
PR: kern/68016
X-MFC after: 6.2-RELEASE
specific privilege names to a broad range of privileges. These may
require some future tweaking.
Sponsored by: nCircle Network Security, Inc.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Discussed on: arch@
Reviewed (at least in part) by: mlaier, jmg, pjd, bde, ceri,
Alex Lyashkov <umka at sevcity dot net>,
Skip Ford <skip dot ford at verizon dot net>,
Antoine Brodin <antoine dot brodin at laposte dot net>