the ones which run the message ring handler.
Some bits of the interrupt mask are part of the status register which is
saved with the process context, and these bits are initialized from the
cpu on which the process is created. This means that all the processes
should have the same value for these interrupt mask bits, so that the
interrupt mask remains the same regardless of what thread is scheduled
on the cpu.
Submitted by: Sriram Gorti (srgorti at netlogicmicro dot com)
limit maximum RX buffer size to RE_RX_DESC_BUFLEN instead of
blindly configuring it to 16KB. Due to lack of documentation, re(4)
didn't allow jumbo frame on these controllers. However it seems
controller is confused with jumbo frame such that it can DMA the
received frame to wrong address instead of splitting it into
multiple RX buffers. Of course, this caused panic.
Since re(4) does not support jumbo frames on these controllers,
make controller drop frame that is longer than RE_RX_DESC_BUFLEN
sized frame. Fortunately RTL810x controllers, which do not support
jumbo frame, have no such issues but this change also limited
maximum RX buffer size allowed to RTL810x controllers. Allowing
16KB RX buffer for controllers that have no such capability is
meaningless.
MFC after: 3 days
- failure code in em_xmit got mangled along the way
and was not properly handling errors.
- local timer code had a leftover UNLOCK call that
should be removed.
MFC after 3 days
PI_DISKLOW. While here, rename PI_TTYLOW to PI_TTY.
- Add a macro PI_SWI() that takes a SWI_* constant as an argument and
returns the suitable thread priority.
the pwm values. We can now set the fan's speed of a PWM controlled fan
with % numbers between 30 and 100 % instead of trying to model a
% number based on rpm.
The fcu chip offers both, the dutycycle and the rpm value of the PWM
controlled fans. I added the rpm value to the list of information
available via sysctl(8).
Tested by: Paul Mather <paul at gromit dlib vt edu>
Approved by: nwhitehorn (mentor)
and just show old (cached) values. Controller will not respond to
the command unless MAC is enabled so DUMP request for down
interface caused request timeout.
RealTek changed TX descriptor format for later controllers so these
controllers require MSS configuration in different location of TX
descriptor. TSO is enabled by default for controllers that use new
descriptor format.
For old controllers, TSO is still disabled by default due to broken
frames under certain conditions but users can enable it.
Special thanks to Hayes Wang at RealTek.
MFC after: 2 weeks
These controllers consist of two Marvell 88SE9128 6Gbps SATA chips and
PLX PCIe bridge. As result, they seem to be agree to work with ahci(4)
as usual HBAs. The only noticed issue is that RAID BIOS disables all
drive caches during boot, though `camcontrol cmd ...` is able to fix that.
Those who wants RAID functionality can still use closed proprietary driver
from HighPoint site.
MFC after: 1 week
erroneously, assumed that 4 bytes of data were in the first
mbuf of a list by replacing the bcopy() with m_copydata().
Also, replace the uses of m_pullup(), which can fail for
reasons other than not enough data, with m_copydata().
For the cases where it isn't known that there is enough
data in the mbuf list, check first via m_len and m_length().
This is believed to fix a problem reported by dpd at dpdtech.com
and george+freebsd at m5p.com.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 8 days
accurate. <sys/linker_set.h> is one of the very few headers similar to
<sys/queue.h> for which nested includes is allowed.
PR: docs/153654
Reviewed by: bde
MFC after: 1 month
install or remove non-SCI interrupt handlers per ACPI Component Architecture
User Guide and Programmer Reference. ACPICA may install such interrupt
handler when a GPE block device is found, for example. Add a wrapper for
ACPI_OSD_HANDLER, convert its return values to ours, and make it a filter.
Prefer KASSERT(9) over panic(9) as we have never seen those in reality.
Clean up some style(9) nits and add my copyright.
DMA boundary bug and runs with PCI-X mode. watchdog timeout was
observed on BCM5704 which lives behind certain PCI-X bridge(e.g.
AMD 8131 PCI-X bridge). It's still not clear whether the root
cause came from that PCI-X bridge or not. The watchdog timeout
indicates the issue is in TX path. If the bridge reorders TX
mailbox write accesses it would generate all kinds of problems but
I'm not sure. This should be revisited.
Tested by: Michael L. Squires (mikes <> siralan dot org)
issue seen on PCIX BCM5704 controller. r216970 fixed the issue but
the DMA address space restriction was applied to all bge(4)
controllers such that it caused unnecessary performance degradation
for controllers that have no such issues.
one. Search global objects, together with main object and
dependencies, for the requested symbol.
Move the common code from symlook_default() into new helper
symlook_global(), and use it both in symlook_global() and
get_program_var_addr().
Supply lock state to get_program_var_addr().
Reviewed by: kan
Tested by: Mykola Dzham <i levsha me>
o) Clear/acknowledge receive interrupt at end of thread. This gives the
management interfaces performance on the order of 100Mbps rather than
the previous level of 10Mbps on my MR-730.
hint is 0 when no SACK data is received to update the hint with. This was
accidentally omitted from r216753.
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 10 weeks
X-MFC with: 216753
o) Add 'octm', a trivial driver for the 10/100 management ports found on some
Octeon systems.
o) Make the Simple Executive's management port helper routines compile on
FreeBSD (namely by not doing math on void pointers.)
o) Add a cvmx_mgmt_port_sendm routine to the Simple Executive to send an mbuf
so there is only one copy in the transmit path, rather than having to first
copy the mbuf to an intermediate buffer and then copy that to the Simple
Executive's transmit ring.
o) Properly work out MII addresses of management ports on the Lanner MR-730.
XXX The MR-730 also needs some patches to the MII read/write routines, but
this is sufficient for now. Media detection will be fixed in the future
when I can spend more time reading the vendor-supplied patches.