checksum header. The header contains a received frame length but
the defined length for AX88772B is different with other ASIX
controllers. When the RX checksum is off, AX88772B controller does
not prepend a checksum header so driver has to use normal header
length mask.
This change should fix RX errors when RX checksum offloading is
off.
Tested by: kevlo
MFC After: 1 week
generic mii_phy_reset().
- Return the result of mii_mediachg() rather than blindly returning 0.
- on smsc(4), driver lock should be held to get current
mii_media_active/mii_media_status value.
Reviewed by: yongari
Realtek RTL8188CU/RTL8192CU USB IEEE 802.11b/g/n wireless cards.
This driver requires microcode which is available in FreeBSD ports:
net/urtwn-firmware-kmod.
Hiren ported the urtwn(4) man page from OpenBSD and Glen just commited a port
for the firmware.
TODO:
- 802.11n support
- Stability fixes - the driver can sustain lots of traffic but has trouble
coping with simultaneous iperf sessions.
- fix debugging
MFC after: 2 months
Tested by: kevlo, hiren, gjb
1) Only multi-TD isochronous transfers should use NORMAL
type after specific type as per XHCI specification.
2) BEI bit is only available in NORMAL and ISOCHRONOUS
TRB types. Don't use this bit for other types to avoid
hardware asserts. Reserved bits should be don't care
though ...
MFC after: 1 week
PR: usb/179342
the regular interrupt handler is not working properly or
in case of MSI interrupts which are not yet supported.
Remove interrupt setup code for FreeBSD versions older
than 700031.
MFC after: 1 week
PR: usb/179342
controller hardware most likely present on UHCI chipsets aswell. The
bug manifests itself when issuing isochronous transfers and bulk
transfers towards the same device simultaneously. From time to time it
happens that either the completion IRQ was missing or that the
completion IRQ was happening before the ITD/SITD was completely
written back to memory. The workaround assumes that double buffered
isochronous transfers are used, and that a second interrupt is
generated at the beginning of the next isochronous transfer to
complete the previous one. Possibly skipping the interrupt at the last
isochronous frame is possible, but will then break single buffered
isochronous transfers. For now we can live with some extra interrupts.
MFC after: 1 week
o The CP2101 and CP2102 do not support GPIO pin use at all, enforce this.
o Support reading the GPIO status on the second port of the CP2105. More
work is needed before the CP2105 GPIO pins can be used as outputs.
Hardware donated by: Silicon Labs
MFC after: 3 weeks
in reduced memory systems.
- Split allocation and freeing of the configuration descriptor into a separate
function, so that the configuration descriptor can be made fixed size
to save memory allocations. This applies for both device and host mode.
Else they won't enumerate at all:
hw.usb.full_ddesc=1
- Reduce the USB descriptor read timeout from 1000ms to
500ms. Typical value for LOW speed devices is 50-100ms.
- Enumerate USB device a maximum of 3 times when a port
connection change event is detected, before giving up.
MFC after: 1 month
enumeration lock. Make sure all callers of usbd_enum_lock() check the return
value. Remove the control transfer specific lock. Bump the FreeBSD version
number, hence external USB modules may need to be recompiled due to a USB
device structure change.
MFC after: 1 week
so that simultaneous access cannot happen. Protect scratch area using
the enumeration lock. Also reduce stack usage in usbd_transfer_setup()
by moving some big stack members to the scratch area. This saves around
200 bytes of stack.
- Fix a whitespace.
MFC after: 1 week
freed memory cannot be used during detach.
- Remove all panic() calls from the urtw driver because
panic() is not appropriate here.
- Remove redundant checks for device detached in
device detach callbacks.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END to mark end of device methods.
MFC after: 2 weeks
into the FreeBSD boot loader, typically for non-USB aware BIOSes, EFI systems
or embedded platforms. This is also useful for out of the system compilation
of the FreeBSD USB stack for various purposes. The USB kernel files can
now optionally include a global header file which should include all needed
definitions required to compile the FreeBSD USB stack. When the global USB
header file is included, no other USB header files will be included by
default.
Add new file containing the USB stack configuration for the
FreeBSD loader build.
Replace some __FBSDID()'s by /* $FreeBSD$ */ comments. Now all
USB files follow the same style.
Use cases:
- console in loader via USB
- loading kernel via USB
Discussed with: Hiroki Sato, hrs @ EuroBSDCon
If a BUSDMA load operation results in a single segment which
is greater than the PAGE_SIZE, the USB computed physical
addresses will not be correct. Make sure that the first
segment is unfolded like the sub-sequent segments are into
USB_PAGE_SIZE big ranges.
Found by: Alexander Nedotsukov
MFC after: 1 week
Make umass return an error code if SCSI sense retrieval request
has failed. Make sure scsi_error_action honors SF_NO_RETRY and
SF_NO_RECOVERY in all cases, even if it cannot parse sense bytes.
Reviewed by: hselasky (umass), scottl (cam)
Factor out USB mouse and keyboard detection logic.
Reject USB keyboards which have mouse alike HID items
in their HID descriptors.
Submitted by: Matthew W
MFC after: 1 week
This patch will save CPU time when the XHCI interrupt is
shared with other devices.
Only check event rings when interrupt bits are set.
Otherwise would indicate hiding possible hardware fault(s).
Tested by: sos @
Submitted by: sos @
MFC after: 1 week
typically do not handle the SYNCHRONIZE_CACHE command - they either
return an error or the firmware enters a reset loop.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Approved by: rstone (co-mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Use a boundary of zero, hence a PAGE_SIZE boundary
is implied by all memory allocations.
Background:
Busdma has problems to allocate more than PAGE_SIZE
bytes when the boundary is PAGE_SIZE bytes too.
Initially it was thought that a boundary of PAGE_SIZE
bytes will only affect loading of DMA memory, so that
segments get split correctly, but it also affects
allocation of DMA'able memory.
Solution:
USB can detect big segments and split them as required
by the USB code.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: gonzo
through the USB API and/or busdma.
The following assumptions have been made:
umass - buffers passed from CAM/SCSI layer are OK
network - mbufs are OK.
Some other nits while at it.
MFC after: 1 week
Suggested by: imp
DMA data does not reside next to non DMA data. This
might cause more memory to be allocated, but solves
problems on platforms using manual cache
synchronization.
Add a convenience function to get the buffer only
from a USB transfer's page cache structure.
MFC after: 1 week
Suggested by: imp
This brand of controllers expects that the number of
contexts specified in the input slot context points
to an active endpoint context, else it refuses to
operate.
- Ring the correct doorbell when streams mode is used.
- Wrap one or two long lines.
Tested by: Markus Pfeiffer (DragonFlyBSD)
MFC after: 1 week
DWC OTG driver. Fix a hang issue when using LOW and FULL speed
BULK traffic. Make sure we don't ask for data in the last
microframe. This allows using devices like USB mice and USB
keyboards connected to the RPI-B.
Suggested by: gonzo @
the 'PREVENT/ALLOW MEDIUM REMOVAL' SCSI command. An example of such a
device is the STmicro ST72682. We send the SCSI command for every open and
close, which can result in a significant amount of spam on the console
during boot.
Reviewed by: hps@
temporarily stores characters if the TTY buffer is full when
used a as a console. This can happen when a console is suspended.
Also properly do the flow stop signalling when this happens and
flow start when the condition changes back to normal again.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to force external kernel modules
to be recompiled. No kernel API changes.
MFC after: 1 week
Suggested by: ed @
to the initial SCSI INQUIRY command, enable all quirks.
This fixes detection of some Transcend TS2GUFM devices.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Michael Dexter
Also update the port reset time from 250ms to 50ms. Some USB devices
have a hard limit in hardware at 222ms for the port reset time and will
not enumerate unless this delay is closer to the usb.org defined value.
This patch can fix enumeration with some USB devices.
Tested by: Guido van Rooij
Submitted by: Nick Hibma
MFC after: 1 week
now use function calls:
if_clone_simple()
if_clone_advanced()
to initialize a cloner, instead of macros that initialize if_clone
structure.
Discussed with: brooks, bz, 1 year ago
and Sierra Wireless MC8790V. Also implement the .ucom_poll method.
Note: This makes it possible to use lqr/echo in ppp.conf. And it
resolves ppp hanging during the PPp> phase.
Reviewed by: hps
MFC after: 1 week
set not-NULL during SIM registration and set to UMASS_GONE on destruction.
Debug messages there look broken for at least 9 years, as they dereference
softc value that was just checked to be equal to NULL.
- Remove magic pointer value UMASS_GONE and use simple NULL instead.
Found by: Clang Static Analyzer
gone rule. Optimise use of channels so that when a channel
is not ready another channel is used. Instead of using the SOF interrupt
use the system timer to drive the host statemachine. This might
give lower throughput and higher latency, but reduces the CPU usage
significantly. The DWC OTG host mode support should not be considered
for serious USB host controller applications. Some problems are still
seen with LOW speed USB devices.
of the DWC OTG is very simple in PIO mode, and we need to re-transmit
data when NAK is received among other things. We probably will need
to implement some kind of rate limitation on the NAK-ing.
The DWC OTG host mode support should still be considered
experimental. Isochronous support for DWC OTG is not
fully implemented. Some code added derives from
Aleksandr Rybalko's dotg.c driver.
"device_free_softc()" and "device_claim_softc()",
to allow USB serial drivers refcounting the softc.
These functions are used to grab the softc from
auto-free and to free the softc back to the correct
malloc type, respectivly.
Discussed with: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
make maintaining this driver from the documentation easier in the future.
This is a mostly mechanical change.
In uslcom_param(), move the zeroing of the final two fields of the
flowctrl structure outside of the "if CRTSCTS" section - not only were
they being zeroed in both the clauses, but these two fields have nothing
to do with hardware flow control anyway.
in SUPER-speed mode, USB 3.0.
This feature has not been tested yet, due to lack of hardware.
This feature is useful when implementing protocols like UASP,
USB attached SCSI which promises higher USB mass storage throughput.
This patch also implements support for hardware processing of endpoints
for increased performance. The switching to hardware processing
of an endpoint is done via a callback to the USB controller driver. The
stream feature is implemented like a variant of a hardware USB protocol.
USB controller drivers implementing device mode needs to be updated to
implement the new "xfer_stall" USB controller method and remove the
"xfer" argument from the "set_stall" method.
The API's toward existing USB drivers are preserved. To setup a USB transfer
in stream mode, set the "stream_id" field of the USB config structure to
the desired value.
The maximum number of BULK streams is currently hardcoded and limited to 8
via a define in usb_freebsd.h.
All USB drivers should be re-compiled after this change.
LibUSB will be updated next week to support streams mode. A new IOCTL to
setup BULK streams as already been implemented. The ugen device nodes
currently only supports stream ID zero.
The FreeBSD version has been bumped.
MFC after: 2 weeks
the device_detach() function doesn't block on UCOM device
drivers until the TTY handle is closed by the userspace
application. This is implemented by a postpone of the
softc free where the UCOM structures reside until the
TTY references are gone.
Discussed with: kib, ed
MFC after: 2 weeks
Extend the callback table of UCOM to include a
"ucom_free" function pointer which is called when
all refs on a UCOM super structure is gone.
Implement various helper functions to handle
refcounting and draining on the UCOM super
structure.
Implement macro which can be used in device
drivers to avoid module unload before all
pending TTY references are gone.
The UCOM API is backwards compatible after this
change and device drivers require no changes
to function with this change. Only a recompilation
of UCOM device drivers is required. The FreeBSD
version has been bumped in that regard.
Discussed with: kib, ed
MFC after: 2 weeks
that the wrong UART reference clock will be used for a few of the IDs.
It is currently not possible to figure that out because the Linux FTDI
driver detects this run-time and not compile time based on the bcdDevice
field of the USB device descriptor. Some of the ID's in usbdevs are not
sorted according to the product ID value. Please feel free to fix this.
I'm out of my xemacs magic today.
This syncronises us with the linux kernel at kernel.org (HEAD).
MFC after: 2 weeks
Use the interface number from the USB interface descriptor
like in the other USB serial drivers. These numbers are not
supposed to be different, though in theory they can. Make sure
that the driver then uses the interface number given by the USB
descriptor, and not the logical index of the USB stack.
For the future:
Whenever the term "index" is used in the USB code, it refers to
a number computed by the USB stack.
Whenever the term "number" is used in the USB code, it refers to
a number in a USB descriptor.
MFC after: 2 weeks
support for only the first port, but the CP2105 can have multiple ports.
Although this allowed the first port to mostly work on multi port devices,
there could be issues with this arrangement.
Update the man page to reflect support for both ports and the CP2105.
Many thanks to Silicon Labs (www.silabs.com) for providing a CP2105-EK
dev board for testing.
MFC after: 2 weeks
list of supported devices with the union of:
NetBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uslsa.c 1.18
OpenBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uslcom.c 1.24
Linux source/drivers/usb/serial/cp210x.c HEAD
Remove duplicate JABLOTRON PC60B entry.
Note that some of the devices added here are multi-port devices. The
uslcom(4) driver currently only supports the first port on such devices.
Update the man page to reflect the full list of supported devices.
Remove two caveats from the CAVEATS section, as both listed caveats no
longer apply. Add a caveat about multi-port devices.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- The USLCOM_SET_BAUD_DIV command (0x01)
- The USLCOM_SET_BAUD_RATE command (0x13)
Devices based on the CP1204 will only accept the latter command, and ignore
the former. As the latter command works on all chips that this driver
supports, switch to always using it.
A slight confusion here is that the previously used command was incorrectly
named USLCOM_BAUD_RATE - even though we no longer use it, rename it to
USLCOM_SET_BAUD_DIV to closer match the name used in the datasheet.
This change reflects a similar change made in the Linux driver, which was
submitted by preston.fick at silabs.com, and has been tested on all of the
uslcom(4) devices I have to hand.
MFC after: 2 weeks
one device (support for Motorola cables), this syncronises us with:
OpenBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uplcom.c 1.56
NetBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uplcom.c 1.73
Linux kernel.org HEAD
MFC after: 1 week
The function keys on a Microsoft Natural Egronomic Keyboard 4000 have been
repurposed as "Help", "Undo", "Redo" etc., and a special "F Lock" key is
required to return them to their normal purpose.
This change enables the UQ_KBD_BOOTPROTO quirk for the MS Natural 4000
keyboard to get the keys working again. More extensive changes to the USB
keyboard infrastructure would be needed to fully support the "F Lock" mode
and the extended keys on this keyboard.
PR: usb/116947
Approved by: hselasky@