than required for handling MAXPHYS and report the resulting maximum
I/O size to CAM instead of implicitly limiting it to DFLTPHYS.
- Move the variables of sym_action2() out of nested scope as required
by style(9) and remove extraneous curly braces.
- Replace a magic value for PCIR_COMMAND with the appropriate macro.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
Tested with a HBA donated by wilko.
MFC after: 3 days
longer uses the active and inactive paging queues. Instead, the pmap now
maintains an LRU-ordered list of pv entry pages, and pmap_pv_reclaim() uses
this list to select pv entries for reclamation.
Note: The old pmap_collect() tried to avoid reclaiming mappings for pages
that have either a hold_count or a busy field that is non-zero. However,
this isn't necessary for correctness, and the locking in pmap_collect() was
insufficient to guarantee that such mappings weren't reclaimed. The new
pmap_pv_reclaim() doesn't even try.
MFC after: 5 weeks
These aren't strictly needed at the moment as we're not doing APSM
and forcing the NIC in and out of network sleep. But, they don't hurt.
Tested:
* AR9280 (mini-PCIe)
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros, Linux ath9k
* Now that ah_configPCIE is called for both power on and suspend/resume,
make sure the right bit(s) are cleared and set when suspending and
resuming. Specifically:
+ force disable/enable the PCIe PHY upon suspend/resume;
+ reprogram the PCIe WAR register when resuming and upon power-on.
* Add a recipe which powers down any PCIe PHY hardware inside the AR5416
(which is the PCI variant) to save on power. I have (currently) no way
to test exactly how much power is saved, if any.
Tested on:
* AR5416 cardbus - although unfortunately pccard/cbb/cardbus currently
detaches the NIC upon suspend, I don't think it's a proper test case.
* AR5418 PCIe attached to expresscard - since we're not doing PCIe APSM,
it's also not likely a full/good test case.
In both instances I went through a handful of suspend/resume cycles and
ensured that the STA vap reassociated correctly.
TODO:
* Setup a laptop to simply sit in a suspend/resume loop, making sure that
the NIC always correctly comes back;
* Start doing suspend/resume tests with actual traffic going on in the
background, as I bet this process is all quite racy at the present;
* Test adhoc/hostap mode, just to be completely sure it's working correctly;
* See if I can jury rig an external power source to an AR5416 to test out
whether ah_disablePCIE() works.
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros
* Add some other WAR bits (very usefully described too) in preparation for
porting over some suspend/resume fixes from ath9k/Atheros.
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros
- Do not use mmap() by default; it can be enabled by --mmap
- Add some minor optimizations for -u
- Update manual page according to the changes
Submitted by: Oleg Moskalenko <oleg.moskalenko@citrix.com>
Use M_ZERO with malloc rather than calling bzero() ourselves.
Change if () panic() checks to KASSERT()s as they are only
catching invariants in code flow but not dependent on network
input/output.
Move initial assigments indirecting pointers after the lock
has been aquired.
Passing layer boundries, reset M_PROTOFLAGS.
Remove a NULL assignment before free.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Properly protect the inp read access when handling the control code.
In the past this was expensive but given the rlock it's not so much
anymore.
Spotted while: optimizing udp6
Discussed with: rwatson (a few months ago)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
PMP ports such as PMP configuration or SEMB should be exposed or hidden.
These ports were always hidden before as useless and sometimes promatic.
But with updated ses driver supporting SEMB it is no longer so straight.
Keep ports hidden by default to avoid probe request ttimeouts if SEP is
not connected to PMP's SEMB via I2C, that is very often situation.
queue the packet for LRO and tell the driver to directly pass it on.
This avoids re-assembly and later re-fragmentation problems when
forwarding.
It's not the best solution but the simplest and most effective for
the moment.
Should have been done: ages ago
Discussed with and by: many
MFC after: 3 days
process exit. Instead use CAM's standard reference counting to prevent
periph going away until process won't complete. I think that sleep in
single CAM SWI thread is not a good idea and may lead to deadlocks if
daemon process waits for some command completion. Combined with recent
patch avoiding use of CAM SWI for ATA it just causes panics because of
sleeps prohibited in interrupt thread context.
This combination doesn't make sense, unit numbers should be hardwired
only in context of a known driver. The wildcard devices should have
wildcard unit numbers.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks