Instead the threshould is initialized in device attach. Later the
threshold could be increased in Tx underrun error and the new
threshold should be used in xl_init_locked().
- Change the workaround for the autopad/checksum offload bug so that
instead of lying about the map size, we actually create a properly
padded mbuf and map it as usual. The other trick works, but is ugly.
This approach also gives us a chance to zero the pad space to avoid
possibly leaking data.
- With the PCIe devices, it looks issuing a TX command while there's
already a transmission in progress doesn't have any effect. In other
words, if you send two packets in rapid succession, the second one may
end up sitting in the TX DMA ring until another transmit command is
issued later in the future. Basically, if re_txeof() sees that there
are still descriptors outstanding, it needs to manually resume the
TX DMA channel by issuing another TX command to make sure all
transmissions are flushed out. (The PCI devices seem to keep the
TX channel moving until all descriptors have been consumed. I'm not
sure why the PCIe devices behave differently.)
(You can see this issue if you do the following test: plug an re(4)
interface into another host via crossover cable, and from the other
host do 'ping -c 2 <host with re(4) NIC>' to prime the ARP cache,
then do 'ping -c 1 -s 1473 <host with re(4) NIC>'. You're supposed
to see two packets sent in response, but you may only see one. If
you do 'ping -c 1 -s 1473 <host with re(4) NIC>' again, you'll
see two packets, but one will be the missing fragment from the last
ping, followed by one of the fragments from this ping.)
- Add the PCI ID for the US Robotics 997902 NIC, which is based on
the RTL8169S.
- Add a tsleep() of 1 second in re_detach() after the interrupt handler
is disconnected. This should allow any tasks queued up by the ISR
to drain. Now, I know you're supposed to use taskqueue_drain() for
this, but something about the way taskqueue_drain() works with
taskqueue_fast queues doesn't seem quite right, and I refuse to be
tricked into fixing it.
- Correct the PCI ID for the 8169SC/8110SC in the device list (I added
the macro for it to if_rlreg.h before, but forgot to use it.)
- Remove the extra interrupt spinlock I added previously. After giving it
some more thought, it's not really needed.
- Work around a hardware bug in some versions of the 8169. When sending
very small IP datagrams with checksum offload enabled, a conflict can
occur between the TX autopadding feature and the hardware checksumming
that can corrupt the outbound packet. This is the reason that checksum
offload sometimes breaks NFS: if you're using NFS over UDP, and you're
very unlucky, you might find yourself doing a fragmented NFS write where
the last fragment is smaller than the minimum ethernet frame size (60
bytes). (It's rare, but if you keep NFS running long enough it'll
happen.) If checksum offload is enabled, the chip will have to both
autopad the fragment and calculate its checksum header. This confuses
some revs of the 8169, causing the packet that appears on the wire
to be corrupted. (The IP addresses and the checksum field are mangled.)
This will cause the NFS write to fail. Unfortunately, when NFS retries,
it sends the same write request over and over again, and it keeps
failing, so NFS stays wedged.
(A simple way to provoke the failure is to connect the failing system
to a network with a known good machine and do "ping -s 1473 <badhost>"
from the good system. The ping will fail.)
Someone had previously worked around this using the heavy-handed
approahch of just disabling checksum offload. The correct fix is to
manually pad short frames where the TCP/IP stack has requested
checksum offloading. This allows us to have checksum offload turned
on by default but still let NFS work right.
- Not a bug, but change the ID strings for devices with hardware rev
0x30000000 and 0x38000000 to both be 8168B/8111B. According to RealTek,
they're both the same device, but 0x30000000 is an earlier silicon spin.
cards: the chips are all marked "RTL8111B", but they put stickers on the
back that say "RTL8168B/8111B". The manual says there's only one HWREV code
for both the 8111B and 8168B devices, which is 0x30000000, but the cards
they sent me actually report HWREV of 0x38000000. Deciding to trust the
hardware in front of me rather than a possibly incorrect manual (it wouldn't
be the first time the HWREVs were incorrectly documented), I changed the
8168 revision code. It turns out this was a mistake though: 0x30000000
really is a valid for the 8168.
There are two possible reasons for there to be two different HWREVs:
1) 0x30000000 is used only for the 8168B and 0x38000000 is only for
the 8111B.
2) There were 8111/8168 rev A devices which both used code 0x30000000,
and the 8111B/8168B both use 0x38000000.
The product list on the RealTek website doesn't mention the existence of
any 8168/8111 rev A chips being in production though, and I've never seen
one, so until I get clarification from RealTek, I'm going to assume that
0x30000000 is just for the 8168B and 0x38000000 is for the 8111B only.
So, the HWREV code for the 8168 has been put back to 0x30000000,
a new 8111 HWREV code has been added, and there are now separate
entries for recognizing both devices in the device list. This will
allow all devices to work, though if it turns out I'm wrong I may
need to change the ID strings
latter is a PCIe 10/100 chip.
Finally fix the EEPROM reading code so that we can access the EEPROMs on all
devices. In order to access the EEPROM, we must select 'EEPROM programming'
mode, and then set the EEPROM chip select bit. Previously, we were setting
both bits simultaneously, which doesn't work: they must be set in the
right sequence.
Always obtain the station address from the EEPROM, now that EEPROM
reading works correctly.
Make the TX interrupt moderation code based on the internal timer
optional and turned off by default.
Make the re_diag() routine conditional and off by default. When it is
on, only use it for the original 8169, which was the only device that
that really needed it.
Modify interrupt handling to use a fast interrupt handler and fast
taskqeueue.
Correct the rgephy driver so that it only applies the DSP fixup for
PHY revs 0 and 1. Later chips are fixed and don't need the fixup.
Make the rgephy driver advertise both 1000_FD and 1000_HD bits in
autoneg mode. A couple of the devices don't autoneg correctly unless
configured this way.
capability is present as not all devices supported by the agp_i810 driver
(such as i915) have the AGP capability. Instead, add an identify routine
to the agp_i810 driver that uses the PCI ID to determine if it should
create an agp child device.
if we need a valid MAC address (for probing the media for example) before
ether_ifattach() has been called since IF_LLADDR() is NULL then.
Tested by: tisco
the addition of pci_find_extcap().
- Change the drm drivers to attach to vgapci. This is #ifdef'd so the
code can be shared across branches.
- Use pci_find_extcap() to look for AGP and PCIE capabilities in drm.
- GC all the drmsub stuff for i810/i830/i915. The agp and drm devices are
now both children of vgapci.
attach to the hostb driver instead. This means that agp can now be loaded
at runtime (in theory at least). Also, the drivers no longer have to
explicity call device_verbose() to cancel out any earlier calls to
device_quiet() by the hostb(4) driver (this shows a limitation in new-bus,
drivers really shouldn't be doing device_quiet() until they know they are
going to drive that device, i.e. in attach).
drivers already map sections into KVA as needed anyway. Note that this
will probably break the nvidia driver, but I will coordinate to get that
fixed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
AMD-8111 SMBus 2.0 controller) are all SMBus 2.0 controllers,
and need another implementation of SMBus access methods, while
this driver supports AMD-756 SMBus 1.0 controller and clones,
including AMD-8111 SMBus 1.0 controller.
Tested by: Vladimir Timofeev (0x006410de),
mezz (0x008410de),
ru (0x00d410de)
All of us got the same(!) nonsense when running ``mbmon -S'',
repeated every four rows.
SMBus 1.0 and not SMBus 2.0.
AMD-8111 hub (datasheet is publically available) implements both SMBus
2.0 (a separate PCI device) and SMBus 1.0 (a subfunction of the System
Management Controller device with the base I/O address is accessible
through the CSR 0x58). This driver only supports AMD-756 SMBus 1.0
compatible devices.
With the patched sysutils/xmbmon port (to also fix PCI ID and to enable
smb(4) support), I now get:
pciconf:
none0@pci0:7:2: class=0x0c0500 card=0x746a1022 chip=0x746a1022 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00
vendor = 'Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)'
device = 'AMD-8111 SMBus 2.0 Controller'
class = serial bus
subclass = SMBus
amdpm0@pci0:7:3: class=0x068000 card=0x746b1022 chip=0x746b1022 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
vendor = 'Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)'
device = 'AMD-8111 ACPI System Management Controller'
class = bridge
dmesg:
amdpm0: <AMD 756/766/768/8111 Power Management Controller> port 0x10e0-0x10ff at device 7.3 on pci0
smbus0: <System Management Bus> on amdpm0
# mbmon -A -d
Summary of Detection:
* SMB monitor(s)[ioctl:AMD8111]:
** Winbond Chip W83627HF/THF/THF-A found at slave address: 0x50.
** Analog Dev. Chip ADM1027 found at slave address: 0x5C.
* ISA monitor(s):
** Winbond Chip W83627HF/THF/THF-A found.
I think the confusion comes from the fact that nobody really tried
SMBus with xmbmon :-), since sysutils/xmbmon port doesn't come with
SMBus support enabled, neither in FreeBSD 4, nor in later versions,
so mbmon(1) was just showing the values from the Winbond sensors
accessible through the ISA I/O method (mbmon -I), for me anyway.
On my test machine, the amdpm(4) didn't even attach due to I/O port
allocation failure (who knows what the hell it read from CSR 0x58
of the SMBus 2.0 device :-), which isn't in the CSR space).
I've also checked that lm_sensors.org uses correct PCI ID for SMBus
1.0 of AMD-8111:
i2c-amd756.c: {PCI_VENDOR_ID_AMD, 0x746B, PCI_ANY_ID, PCI_ANY_ID, 0, 0, AMD8111 },
This driver is analogous to our amdpm.c which supports SMBus 1.0
AMD-756 and compatible devices, including SMBus 1.0 on AMD-8111.
i2c-amd8111.c: { 0x1022, 0x746a, PCI_ANY_ID, PCI_ANY_ID, 0, 0, 0 },
This driver is analogous to nForce-2/3/4, i2c-nforce2.c, which
supports SMBus 2.0, and which our amdpm.c does NOT support
(SMBus 2.0 uses a different, ACPI-unified, API to talk to SMBus).
At least I know for sure it doesn't work with my nForce3. :-)
(The xmbmon port will be fixed to correct the PCI ID too and to
enable the smb(4) support.)
SMBus busses. Because of limitations in smbus_if.m, the second smbus is
attached to an amdpm1 device that is a child of amdpm0.
Submitted by: Artemiev Igor ai (at) bmc dot brk dot ru
and some fixes from Motomichi Matsuzaki. Testing involved many people, but the
final, successful testing was from rwatson who endured several rounds of "it
crashes at XYZ stage" "oh, please correct this typo and try again." The Linux
driver, and to a small extent the limited specs, were both used as a reference
for how to program the chipset.
PR: kern/80396
Submitted by: Martin Mersberger
- Don't call tulip_addr_filter() to reset the RX address filter in
tulip_reset() since that gets called before ether_ifattach(). Just
call it in tulip_init_locked().
- Use be16dec() and le16dec() to parse MAC addresses when programming
the RX filter.
- Let ether_ioctl() handle SIOCSIFMTU since we were doing the exact same
thing with the added bonus that we leaked the driver lock if the MTU
was > ETHERMTU in the homerolled version. This part will be MFC'd.
Clue from: wpaul (1)
Stolen from: marcel (2 via patch for dc(4))
MFC after: 1 week
rather than in ifindex_table[]; all (except one) accesses are
through ifp anyway. IF_LLADDR() works faster, and all (except
one) ifaddr_byindex() users were converted to use ifp->if_addr.
- Stop storing a (pointer to) Ethernet address in "struct arpcom",
and drop the IFP2ENADDR() macro; all users have been converted
to use IF_LLADDR() instead.
PCI-ISA bridge. Thus, when viapm0 or viapropm0 attaches, isab0 dosen't
attach so there is no isa0 bus hung off of that bridge. In the non-ACPI
case, legacy0 will add an isa0 anyway as a fail-safe, but ACPI assumes that
any ISA bus will be enumerated via a bridge. To fix this, call
isab_attach() to attach an isa0 ISA child bus device if the pm or propm
device we are probing is a PCI-ISA bridge. Both drivers now have to
implement the bus_if interface via the generic methods for resource
allocation, etc. to work. Also, we now add 2 new ISA bus drivers that
attach to viapm and viapropm devices.
PR: kern/87363
Reported by: Oliver Fromme olli at secnetix dot de
Tested by: glebius
MFC after: 1 week
With this change, the driver tests good (at least on i386):
wb0: <Winbond W89C840F 10/100BaseTX> port 0xb800-0xb87f mem 0xe6800000-0xe680007f irq 12 at device 10.0 on pci0
miibus1: <MII bus> on wb0
amphy0: <Am79C873 10/100 media interface> on miibus1
amphy0: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, auto
wb0: Ethernet address: 00:00:e8:18:2a:02
wb0: link state changed to DOWN
wb0: link state changed to UP
- Add locked variants of init() and start().
- Use callout_*() to manage callout.
- Test IFF_DRV_RUNNING rather than IFF_UP in wb_intr() to see if we are
still active when an interrupt comes in.
I couldn't find any of these cards anywhere to test on myself, and google
turns up references to FreeBSD and OpenBSD manpages for this driver when
trying to locate a card that way. I'm not sure anyone actually uses these
cards with FreeBSD.
Tested by: NO ONE (despite repeated requests)
I had to initialize the ifnet a bit earlier in attach so that the
if_printf()'s in vr_reset() didn't explode with a page fault.
- Use M_ZERO with contigmalloc() rather than an explicit bzero.
cards and teach the re(4) driver to attach to revision 3 cards.
Submitted by: Fredrik Lindberg fli+freebsd-current at shapeshifter dot se
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: imp, mdodd
based on XMAC II chip should be ready for this in their initial
mode of operation, and Yukon-based NICs are configured so by
the driver.
PR: kern/79998
MFC after: 1 month
opt_device_polling.h
- Include opt_device_polling.h into appropriate files.
- Embrace with HAVE_KERNEL_OPTION_HEADERS the include in the files that
can be compiled as loadable modules.
Reviewed by: bde
o Axe poll in trap.
o Axe IFF_POLLING flag from if_flags.
o Rework revision 1.21 (Giant removal), in such a way that
poll_mtx is not dropped during call to polling handler.
This fixes problem with idle polling.
o Make registration and deregistration from polling in a
functional way, insted of next tick/interrupt.
o Obsolete kern.polling.enable. Polling is turned on/off
with ifconfig.
Detailed kern_poll.c changes:
- Remove polling handler flags, introduced in 1.21. The are not
needed now.
- Forget and do not check if_flags, if_capenable and if_drv_flags.
- Call all registered polling handlers unconditionally.
- Do not drop poll_mtx, when entering polling handlers.
- In ether_poll() NET_LOCK_GIANT prior to locking poll_mtx.
- In netisr_poll() axe the block, where polling code asks drivers
to unregister.
- In netisr_poll() and ether_poll() do polling always, if any
handlers are present.
- In ether_poll_[de]register() remove a lot of error hiding code. Assert
that arguments are correct, instead.
- In ether_poll_[de]register() use standard return values in case of
error or success.
- Introduce poll_switch() that is a sysctl handler for kern.polling.enable.
poll_switch() goes through interface list and enabled/disables polling.
A message that kern.polling.enable is deprecated is printed.
Detailed driver changes:
- On attach driver announces IFCAP_POLLING in if_capabilities, but
not in if_capenable.
- On detach driver calls ether_poll_deregister() if polling is enabled.
- In polling handler driver obtains its lock and checks IFF_DRV_RUNNING
flag. If there is no, then unlocks and returns.
- In ioctl handler driver checks for IFCAP_POLLING flag requested to
be set or cleared. Driver first calls ether_poll_[de]register(), then
obtains driver lock and [dis/en]ables interrupts.
- In interrupt handler driver checks IFCAP_POLLING flag in if_capenable.
If present, then returns.This is important to protect from spurious
interrupts.
Reviewed by: ru, sam, jhb
the softc.
- Use callout_init_mtx() and rather than timeout/untimeout in both rl(4)
and re(4).
- Fix locking for ifmedia by locking the driver in the ifmedia handlers
rather than in the miibus functions. (re(4) didn't lock the mii stuff
at all!)
- Fix some locking in re_ioctl().
Note: the two drivers share the same softc declared in if_rlreg.h, so they
had to be change simultaneously.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested by: several on rl(4), none on re(4)
control register and AGP bridge seems to be inconsistent with some BIOS.
Instead of relying on BIOS settings, we just take the initial aperture size
and encode them for both miscellaneous control register and AGP bridge.
Some idea was borrowed from agp_nvidia.c.
- Add preliminary ULi M1689 chipset support. The idea was taken from Linux
because hardware and documentation are unavailable. Not tested.
- Add more VIA chipset PCI IDs taken from Linux driver.
Approved by: anholt (mentor)
Tested by: Adam Gregoire <ebola at psychoholics dot org>
Ganael Laplanche <ganael.laplanche at martymac dot com>
K Wieland <kwieland at wustl dot edu>
replacement and has additional features which make it superior.
Discussed on: -arch
Reviewed by: thompsa
X-MFC-after: never (RELENG_6 as transition period)
- Remove sis_unit and use device_printf() and if_printf() instead.
- Use callout_init_mtx() for the callout.
- Remove spls.
- Fix locking for ifmedia to happen in the ifmedia handlers rather than in
sis_ioctl().
- Log an error message if we fail to allocate any resources. Perform
cleanup if we fail to allocate any resources so that we don't leave
a mutex hanging around.
Tested by: Jason Tsai jason dot tsai at newcyberian dot com (1-4)
MFC after: 3 days
the Linux driver, since specs are unavailable. Many thanks to Adam Kirchhoff
for multiple useful testing cycles, and Ralf Wostrack for the final fix to get
it working.
PR: i386/75251
Submitted by: anholt
9200 according to one responder. The primary issue was not setting some bits
to say that the entries were active, but also fix one place where some memory
wasn't being used as volatile as it should. While here, change some use of ffs
to a relatively short case statement, to make it more obvious what's going on.
PR: kern/71638, kern/72372, kern/71547?
Submitted by: Andrew J. Caines <A.J.Caines@halplant.com>,
Robin Schoonover <end@endif.cjb.net>,
Jason Henson <jason@ec.rr.com>
attempts to deallocate busdma tags and resources that haven't been
allocated yet, causing a panic every time a dc interface fails to
attach. Fix by checking that we really have something to dealloc
before calling bus_dma*() functions.
Approved by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
- Use callout_init_mtx() and static callouts rather than timeout().
- m_getcl() in one place to simplify the code.
Tested by: Gavin Atkinson gavin dot atkinson at ury dot york dot ac dot uk
MFC after: 1 week
- Add locked variants of start(), init(), ifmedia_upd(), and poll() and stop
recursing on the driver lock.
- Add locking to ifmedia_upd() and ifmedia_sts().
- Use callout_*() instead of timeout/untimeout.
- Fix locking in ioctl().
Tested by: Bob Bishop rb at gid dot co dot uk
MFC after: 3 days
tulip_mbuf_compress(). If we fail to allocate a new mbuf to copy the
data into, put the mbuf back in the driver's send queue so that we can
retry it later rather than throwing the packet away.
- Use m_devget() instead of doing it inline ourselves in the
TULIP_COPY_RXDATA case. If we fail to allocate an mbuf to copy the data
into, don't forget about the original mbuf cluster. The old code would
lose the pointer and leak the cluster in that case. Now it doesn't lose
it but always sticks the original rx buffer back into the receive ring
after trying to copy the data out and send it up the stack. Also, if we
fail to allocate a new mbuf to copy the data into, log an input error.
Also, don't combine the priming case with the received-a-packet case to
make the code flow a bit clearer and easier to follow.
- Remove form feed characters.
- Fixup style of function declarations.
- Assume that an mbuf cluster is big enough to hold an ethernet frame.
(This should really be using m_defrag(), but this diff is just simple
changes for now.)
- Allocate arrays of metadata for the descriptors in the rx and tx rings
and change the ring pointers to walk the metadata array rather than the
actual descriptor rings. Each metadata object contains a pointer to its
descriptor, a pointer to any associated mbuf, and a pointer to the
associated bus_dmamap_t in the bus_dma case. The mbuf pointers replace
the tulip_txq and tulip_rxq local ifqueue's in the softc.
- Add lots of KTR trace entries using a local KTR_TULIP level which
defaults to 0, but can be changed to KTR_DEV at the top of the file
when debugging.
- Rename tulip_init(), tulip_start(), tulip_ifinit(), and tulip_ifstart()
to tulip_init_locked(), tulip_start_locked(), tulip_init(), and
tulip_start(), respectively, to match the convention in other drivers.
- Add a TULIP_SP_MAC() macro to encode two bytes of the MAC address into
the setup buffer and use that in place of lots of BYTE_ORDER #ifdef's.
Also, remove an incorrect XXX comment I added earlier, the driver was
correct (at least it does the same thing dc(4) does). TULIP_SP_MAC
was shamelessly copied from DC_SP_MAC() in dc(4).
- Remove the #ifdef'd NetBSD bus-dma code and replace it with FreeBSD
bus-dma code that not only compiles but even works at runtime.
- Use callout_init_mtx() instead of just callout_init().
- Correct the various wrapper macros for bus_dmamap_sync() for the rx
and tx buffers to only ask for the sync ops that they actually need.
- Tidy the #ifdef TULIP_COPY_RXDATA code by expanding an #ifdef a bit
so it becomes easier to read at the expense of a couple of duplicated
lines of code. Also, use m_getcl() to get an mbuf cluster rather than
MGETHDR() followed by MCLGET().
- Maintain the ring free (ri_free) count for the rx ring metadata since
we no longer have tulip_rxq.ifq_len around to indicate how many mbuf's
are currently in the rx ring.
- Add code to teardown bus_dma resources when attach fails and generally
fixup attach to do a better job of cleaning up when it fails. This
gets us a good bit closer to possibly having a detach method someday
and making this driver an unloadable module.
- Add some functions that can be called from ddb to dump the state of
a descriptor ring and to dump the state of an individual descriptor.
- Various comment grammer and spelling fixes.
I have bus-dma turned on by default, but I've left the non-bus-dma code
around so that it can be turned off to aid in debugging should any problems
turn up later on. I'll be removing the non-bus-dma code in a subsequent
commit.
- Remove a lot of superfluous locking during attach. There is no need
to lock access to the driver until some other thread has a way of getting
to it. For ethernet drivers the other ways include registering an
interrupt handler via bus_setup_intr(), calling ether_ifattach() to hook
into the network stack, and kicking off a callout-driven timer via
callout_reset().
- Use callout_* rather than timeout/untimeout.
- Break out of xl_rxeof() if IFF_DRV_RUNNING is clear after ifp->if_input
returns to handle the case where the interface was stopped while we were
passing a packet up the stack. Don't call xl_rxeof() in xl_rxeof_task()
unless IFF_DRV_RUNNING is set. With these fixes in place, any
outstanding task will gracefully terminate as soon as it gets a chance to
run after the interface has been stopped via xl_stop(). As a result,
taskqueue_drain() is no longer required in xl_stop(). The task is still
drained in detach() however to make sure that detach() can safely destroy
the driver mutex at the end of the function.
- Lock the driver lock in the ifmedia callouts and don't lock across
ifmedia_ioctl() in xl_ioctl().
Note: glebius came up with most of (3) as well independently. I took a
rather roundabout way of arriving at the same conclusion.
MFC after: 3 days
- Add locked versions of start and init. The SRM_MEDIA code in dc_init()
stayed in dc_init() instead of moving to dc_init_locked() to make the
locking saner.
- Use callout_init_mtx().
- Fixup locking in detach and ioctl.
- Lock the driver in the ifmedia callouts.
- Don't recurse on the driver lock.
- De-spl.
MFC after: 3 days
- Add locked variants of start, init, and ifmedia_upd.
- Use callout_* instead of timeout/untimeout.
- Don't recurse on the driver lock.
- Fixup locking in ioctl.
- Lock the driver lock in the ifmedia handlers rather than across
ifmedia_ioctl().
Tested by: brueffer
MFC after: 3 days
- Don't set IFF_ALLMULTI in our ifnet's if_flags if we end up allowing
all multicast due to limits in the MAC receive filters in hardware.
Requested by: rwatson (2)
IFF_DRV_RUNNING, as well as the move from ifnet.if_flags to
ifnet.if_drv_flags. Device drivers are now responsible for
synchronizing access to these flags, as they are in if_drv_flags. This
helps prevent races between the network stack and device driver in
maintaining the interface flags field.
Many __FreeBSD__ and __FreeBSD_version checks maintained and continued;
some less so.
Reviewed by: pjd, bz
MFC after: 7 days
- Add locked versions of the init() and start() methods.
- Use callout_*() rather than timeout().
- Make the driver lock non-recursive.
- Push down locking in detach() and ioctl().
- Fix the tick routine to bail if the interface has been stopped and use
callout_drain() in detach() after the call to stop().
- Lock the driver lock in the ifmedia handlers.
Tested by: Ketrien I. Saihr-Kesenchedra ketrien at error404.nls.net
MFC after: 1 week
over iteration of their multicast address lists when synchronizing the
hardware address filter with the network stack-maintained list.
Problem reported by: Ed Maste (emaste at phaedrus dot sandvine dot ca>
MFC after: 1 week
- Add locking to protect the softc and mark this driver as MP safe. There
are still some edge cases with multiport cards that need more locking
work.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested on: alpha
set in tulip_attach() and its value is never changed, so all the extra sets
are redundant. I'm guessing that at some point in time de(4) had an
alternate start routine, but that hasn't been true in recent history.
default:
- TULIP_NEED_FASTTIMEOUT - tulip_fasttimeout() wasn't called anywhere
- BIG_PACKET - only worked on i386 anyway
- TULIP_USE_SOFTINTR - doesn't compile and was never updated to handle
new netisr registration
- non-FreeBSD code
struct ifnet or the layer 2 common structure it was embedded in have
been replaced with a struct ifnet pointer to be filled by a call to the
new function, if_alloc(). The layer 2 common structure is also allocated
via if_alloc() based on the interface type. It is hung off the new
struct ifnet member, if_l2com.
This change removes the size of these structures from the kernel ABI and
will allow us to better manage them as interfaces come and go.
Other changes of note:
- Struct arpcom is no longer referenced in normal interface code.
Instead the Ethernet address is accessed via the IFP2ENADDR() macro.
To enforce this ac_enaddr has been renamed to _ac_enaddr.
- The second argument to ether_ifattach is now always the mac address
from driver private storage rather than sometimes being ac_enaddr.
Reviewed by: sobomax, sam
in case of IP fast forwarding. Enqueue a taskqueue(9) task instead of
calling xl_rxeof() directly.
Reported & tested by: Slava Alpatov
Reviewed by: wpaul
MFC after: 1 week
While there also check for failed device_add_child calls.
Found by: Coventry Analysis tool[1].
Submitted by: sam[1]
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
dc0: MII without any PHY!
We have to enable the connection to the MII first. Doing so fixes the
problem cards without breaking the older, working cards.
Bad card provided by: deischen
This adds support for the SiS intergrated NIC on some Athlon64 motherboards.
The MAC address is stored in the APC CMOS RAM and this fixes the
sis driver ending up with a 00:00:00:00:00:00 MAC address.
Submitted by: Stasys Smailys <ssmailys@komvista.lt>
Do our best to plug some memory leaks (VPD data, jumbo memory buffer,...).
Log if we cannot free because memory still in use[1].
Change locking to avoid ''acquiring duplicate lock of same
type: "network driver"'' and potential deadlock. Also seems to fix LOR #063.
[1] This change does not solve problems if buffers are still in use when
unloading if_sk.ko. There is ongoing work which will address jumbogram
allocations in a more general way.
PR: kern/75677 (with changes, no mii fixes in here)
Tested by: net, Antoine Brodin (slightly different version)
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
MFC after: 5 days
Obtained from: NetBSD if_sk.c rev. 1.11
* Take PHY out of reset for Yukon Lite Rev. A3.
Submitted by: postings on net@ in thread "skc0: no PHY found", 2005-02-22
Tested by: net
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
MFC after: 5 days
if the interface is marked RUNNING.
Obtained from: NetBSD if_sk.c rev. 1.12
* Don't initialize the card (and start an autonegotiation) every time the IP
address changes. Makes 'dhclient sk0' invocations way faster and more
consistant. i.e. one DHCPREQUEST elicits the DHCPACK.
Obtained from: OpenBSD if_sk.c rev. 1.56
* Additional locking changes in sk_ioctl.
PR: kern/61296 should see improvements by the last two.
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
MFC after: 5 days
asks that each buffer be (2048 * 256) bytes long. I suspect that alignment
isn't a real requirement since busdma only recently started honoring it. The
size is also bogus. Fix both of these and stop busdma from trying to
exhaust the system memory pool with bounce pages.
Submitted by: Kevin Oberman
MFC After: 7 days
can retransmit on TX underrun and set TOK in addition to TUND. Also add a
check to prevent overflow of the addressable threshold.
This fixes some reports of rl(4) slowness, believed to be related to ALTQ
before.
PR: kern/61448
Submitted by: Tim Draegen-Gilman <timNOeudaemonSPAMnet> (with changes)
MFC after: 1 week
3C920B-EMB-WNM Integrated Fast Ethernet Controller
Submitter reports that the card appears to autonegotiate properly, and
operate well with high levels of NFS traffic.
PR: 75253
Submitted by: "Oleg V. Nauman" <oleg at reis dot zp dot ua>
MFC after: 2 weeks
generic bridge support was biting us more than it helped, whenever a new chipset
came out from a vendor and misprogramming it caused strange hangs or corruption.
[2] Add a large number of PCI IDs based on what the linux drivers support.
Note that the new PCI IDs haven't been tested, they're just *likely* to work.
In particular the VIA AGP 8x chipsets are concerning, due to lack of testing,
possible issues (kern/69953), and not having a nice "does this bridge say it
would do 8x" function. However, this shouldn't make the situation worse, since
these chips would have probed in the past anyway.
In contrast to OpenBSD we enable jumbo frame support
depending on MTU setting (like done for xmac).
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
Obtained from: OpenBSD if_sk.c r1.52 (YU_SMR_MFL_JUMBO flag)
Tested by: Heinz Knocke <knockefreebsd at o2 dot pl>
MFC after: 5 days
zero-copy receive of jumbo frames. This eliminates the need for the
jumbo frame allocator implemented in kern/uipc_jumbo.c and sys/jumbo.h.
Remove it.
Note: Zero-copy receive of jumbo frames did not work without these changes;
I believe there was insufficient locking on the jumbo vm object.
Tested by: ken@
Discussed with: gallatin@
- Initialize sc->pcn_type during ATTACH as softc contents may not surivive
from PROBE.
- Print out chip-id to assist with ongoing pcn(4) debugging efforts.
queue a packet to the hardware... instead of when the hardware queue is
empty..
don't initalize cur_tx now that it doesn't need to be...
Pointed out by: bde
also fix up handling and proding of the tx, _OACTIVE is now handled
better...
Submitted by: Peter Edwards (sk_jfree)
Obtained from: OpenBSD and/or NetBSD (tx prod)
but sk(4) is so prevalent on AMD64 motherboards we need to reduce the number
of round trips in the mailing lists trying to get sufficient information to
make sure we've got a handle on all the problems and are working towards
making sk(4) solid.
Submitted by: bz
sensitive, but less excercised location (the watchdog). While here use the
*_start_locked function directly to avoid drop, grab, drop lock.
I have to be very careful with future ALTQ patches!
Found & reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 3 days
* Announce some more fields from ro area for better debugging of broken
sk(4)s on various boards.
Submitted by: Bjoern A. Zeeb <bzeeb-lists@lists.zabbadoz.net>
the device is suspended or shutting down. This will need to be rethought
slightly if we implement suspend/resume support within vr(4).
This appears to fix the vr_shutdown() panic on SMP machines.
My theory here is there's a race somewhere during vr_detach() with
vr_intr() in the SMP case which was sometimes being triggered,
although quite why this was happening is unclear (vr_stop() also
explicitly disables interrupts by writing to the IMR register).
MFC-to-RELENG_5* candidate.
PR: kern/62889
Tested by: seb at struchtrup dot com
MFC after: 10 days
two loops in agp_generic_bind_memory(). As an intended side-effect, all
of the calls to vm_page_wakeup() are now performed with the containing
vm object lock held.
as the original logic did. This fixes a race with vr_intr() which was
masked on UP systems and manifested on SMP systems.
PR: kern/62889
MFC after: 1 day
(usually taking 20 seconds to transmit a packet).. no longer fall back
to only transmitting one packet (instead of the entire queue) after we
have processed the entire send queue... I have no idea why we didn't
start seeing this problem ~6 years ago when this code was introduced...
is a no-op on little endian architectures, but fixes getting the MAC
address for some dc(4) cards on big endian architectures.
This is a RELENG_5 candidate.
Tested by: gallatin (powerpc), marius (sparc64)
First version of the patch written by: gallatin
to 7422 since it appears that the 8169S can't transmit anything larger..
The 8169S can receive full jumbo frames, but we don't have an mru to let
the upper layers know this...
add fixup so that this driver should work on alignment constrained platforms
(!i386 && !amd64)
MFC after: 5 days
it only if we weren't UP before. In some cases xl_init causes long media
re-negotiation, and ppp(8) fails to open PPPoE connection because it sets
IFF_UP every time before opening PPPoE connection.
PR: kern/69133
Patch by: mdodd
Approved by: wpaul, julian (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
by default. As such, mark if_dc as IFF_NEEDSGIANT until such
time as appropriate locking review and testing can take place,
and the locking can be enabled by default.
RELENG_5 candidate.
to check aperture size, avoiding hangs. Maintain the rest of the bits when
setting/unsetting ATTBASE. This essentially matches Linux's AGP driver as well.
PR: kern/70037
Submitted by: Mark Tinguely <tinguely at casselton dot net>
Obtained from: NetBSD
variable. If set to "true" OF_getetheraddr() will now return the unique
MAC address stored in the "local-mac-address" property of the device's
OFW node if present and the host address/system default MAC address if
the node doesn't doesn't have such a property. If set to "false" the
host address will be returned for all devices like before this change.
This brings the behaviour of device drivers for NICs with OFW support/
FCode, i.e. dc(4) for on-board DM9102A on Sun machines, gem(4) and hme(4),
regarding "local-mac-address?" in line with NetBSD and Solaris.
The man pages of the respective drivers will be updated separately to
reflect this change.
- Remove OF_getetheraddr2() which was used as a stopgap in dc(4). Its
functionality is now part of OF_getetheraddr().
chipsets, based on Linux's via-agp.c. On boot, the system selects which AGP
version to use based on the inserted card. If v2 was chosen, the chipset
needs to be programmed with the v2 registers still. Also included in kern/69953
are changes to make the programming of the v3 registers match linux, but that
will be left out until the need to do so is confirmed (want specs or a tester).
PR: kern/69953
Submitted by: Oleg Sharoiko <os@rsu.ru>
Tested by: Oleg Sharoiko <os@rsu.ru>, Geoff Speicher <geoff@speicher.org>
(full version from PR)
- Avoid an additional lock acquire/release when leaving xl_intr(), by
changing xl_start*() to xl_start*_locked(), and calling the appropriate
routine by chip revision (as the DMA descriptors are different).
- Simplify the appropriate routines now that they are called with the
lock held.
This should save a significant amount of CPU cycles spent on servicing
each interrupt for both UP and SMP whilst remaining MPSAFE.
Tested by: rwatson
- Add *_locked() entry points as needed to avoid unnecessary lock thrashing.
- Use these entry points wisely.
- Only acquire the lock once when servicing an interrupt.
- Check 'suspended' on interrupt to avoid racing detach.
- Correct a mis-spelled comment.
- Don't take the lock in vr_reset() to avoid lock thrashing in attach.
- Comment this.
Reviewed by: -net (silence)
- Avoid unnecessary re-acquisition elsewhere by adding *_locked()
entry points as needed.
- Correct locking for the DEVICE_POLLING case.
- Hold the driver lock for the entire duration of interrupt servicing,
to avoid unneeded, expensive re-acquisition; use *_locked() entry
points as needed.
Reviewed by: -net (silence)
- Eliminate the use of a recursive mutex.
- Mark the driver INTR_MPSAFE.
This work is incomplete and will be refined in a future commit.
- Most notably, _locked() variants of entry points need to be introduced.
- The mii upcall/downcall may still be racy.
- Add a stubbed-out guard against racing rl_detach() for the time being.
Tested on: UP, debug.mpsafenet && !debug.mpsafenet
Reviewed by: silence on -net
Use C99 types. Use ANSI function definitions. Sort prototypes.
Split long lines correctly. Punctuate/wordsmith comments.
Use device_printf()/if_printf() where possible.
Reviewed by: -net (silence)
- Eliminate the use of a recursive mutex.
- Mark the driver as INTR_MPSAFE.
- Split the default media choice code out into xl_choose_media() to
avoid making poor assumptions about the state of the lock during attach.
- The miibus upcall/downcall paths may still be racy.
Change to commented-out locking assertions there for now.
- Tested with nfsclient, routed, ssh, ntp, dhclient and quagga bgpd.
- This needs SMP test coverage. I do not have such resources.
Tested on: UP, !debug.mpsafenet && debug.mpsafenet
Hardware: 3C905B-TX (0x905510b7)
- Use device_printf() during device probe/attach.
- Move if_xname initialization to before xl_reset() is called.
- Use if_printf() at all other times after struct ifnet has been
initialized.