function.
From the submitter:
This patch fixes an issue I encountered using an NFS root with an
ar71xx-based MikroTik RouterBoard 450G on -current where the kernel fails
to contact a DHCP/BOOTP server via if_arge when it otherwise should be able
to. This may be the same issue that Monthadar Al Jaberi reported against
an RSPRO on 6 March, as the signature is the same:
%%%
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
.
.
.
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
arge0: initialization failed: no memory for rx buffers
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
arge0: initialization failed: no memory for rx buffers
%%%
The primary issue that I found is that the DHCP/BOOTP message that
bootpc_call() is sending never makes it onto the wire, which I believe is
due to the following:
- Last December, a change was made to the ifioctl that bootpc_call() uses
to adjust the netmask around the sosend().
- The new ioctl (SIOCAIFADDR) performs an if_init when invoked, whereas the
old one (SIOCSIFNETMASK) did not.
- if_arge maintains its own sense of link state in sc->arge_link_status.
- On a single-phy interface, sc->arge_link_status is initialized to 0 in
arge_init_locked().
- sc->arge_link_status remains 0 until a phy state change notification
causes arge_link_task to run, notice the link is up, and set it to 1.
- The inits caused by the ifioctls in bootpc_call are reinitializing the
interface, but not the phy, so sc->arge_link_status goes to 0 and remains
there.
- arge_start_locked() always sees sc->arge_link_status == 0 and returns
without queuing anything.
The attached patch changes arge_init_locked() such that in the single-phy
case, instead of initializing sc->arge_link_status to 0, it runs
arge_link_task() to set it according to the current phy state. This change
has allowed my setup to mount an NFS root successfully.
Submitted by: Patrick Kelsey <kelsey@ieee.org>
Reviewed by: juli
I had some interesting hangs until I realised I should try flushing the
DDR FIFO register and lo and behold, hangs stopped occuring.
I've put in a few DDR flushes here and there in case people decide to
reuse some of these functions. It's very very likely they're almost
all superflous.
To test:
* Connect to a network with a _lot_ of broadcast traffic
* Do this:
# while true; do ifconfig arge0 down; ifconfig arge0 up; done
This fixes the mbuf exhaustion that has been reported when the interface
state flaps up/down.
required for the ABI the kernel is being built for.
XXX This is implemented in a kind-of nasty way that involves including source
files, but it's still an improvement.
o) Retire ISA_* options since they're unused and were always wrong.
* enable ALQ and net80211/ath ALQ logging by default, to make it possible
to get debug register traces.
* Update some comments
* Enable HWPMC for testing.
implementations or no implementation on all platforms.
Some of these functions might be good ideas, but their semantics were unclear
given the lack of implementation, and an unlucky porter could be fooled into
trying to implement them or, worse, being baffled when something like
platform_trap_enter() failed to be called.
- Pass interrupt trapframe for handlers dow the chain
- Add PMC interrupt handler
PMC interrupt is a special case, so we want handle it as soon as possible
with minimum overhead. So we handle it apb filter routine.
bootable image.
The kernel has to fit inside an 896KiB area in a 4MB SPI flash.
So a bunch of stuff can't be included (and more is to come), including
(unfortunately) IPv6.
TODO:
* GPIO modules need to be created
* Shrink the image a bit more by removing some of the CAM layer debugging
strings.
make use of it where possible.
This primarily brings in support for newer hardware, and FreeBSD is not yet
able to support the abundance of IRQs on new hardware and many features in the
Ethernet driver.
Because of the changes to IRQs in the Simple Executive, we have to maintain our
own list of Octeon IRQs now, which probably can be pared-down and be specific
to the CIU interrupt unit soon, and when other interrupt mechanisms are added
they can maintain their own definitions.
Remove unmasking of interrupts from within the UART device now that the
function used is no longer present in the Simple Executive. The unmasking
seems to have been gratuitous as this is more properly handled by the buses
above the UART device, and seems to work on that basis.
o) The MAC set must occur before the multicast list is set up as the former
will enable the CAM unconditionally, while promiscuous mode disables it,
so if promiscuous mode is to be set this must occur after the MAC is
programmed.
o) The multicast list must be set up unconditionally as even if flags have
not changed, if the interface has gone through a reinitialization, the
state of the CAM as changed by the MAC initialization could be incorrect.
o) Call octm_init when flags change, even if the interface is already running.
XXX It would be good to use a better way to size intrcnt.
o) Fix literal 4s that are supposed to be sizeof (u_long).
XXX Why the * 2 here? Is this an artifact of a different system that this
code came from? We seem to allocate twice as much space for intrcnt
as we admit to in sintrcnt.
platforms.
This will make every attempt to mount a non-mpsafe filesystem to the
kernel forbidden, unless it is expressely compiled with
VFS_ALLOW_NONMPSAFE option.
This patch is part of the effort of killing non-MPSAFE filesystems
from the tree.
No MFC is expected for this patch.
o) Get rid of some unused macros related to features we don't intend to
provide.
o) Get rid of macro definitions for MIPS-I CPUs. We are not likely to
support anything that predartes MIPS-III.
o) Respell MIPS3_* macros as MIPS_*, which is how most of them were being
used already.
o) Eliminate a duplicate and mostly-unused set of exception vector macros.
There's still considerable duplication and lots more obsolete in our headers,
but this reduces one of the larger files to a size where one could reckon
about the correctness of its contents with a mere few hours of contemplation.
There is, of course, a question of whether we need definitions for fields,
registers and configurations that we are unlikely to ever use or implement,
even if they're not obsolete since 1991. FreeBSD is not a processor
reference manual, and things that aren't used may be wrong, or may be
duplicated because nobody could possibly actually know whether they're
already defined.
the native sigreturn doesn't use set_mcontext like the COMPAT_FREEBSD32 version
does, this wouldn't actually result in overwriting the TLS base. Probably it
makes sense to restructure the native sigreturn to use set_mcontext for
consistency, and to allow sigreturn to change the TLS base.
TLS:
o) The mc_tls field used to store the TLS base when doing context gets and
restores was left a pointer and not converted to a 32-bit integer. This
had the bug of not correctly capturing the TLS value desired by the user,
and the extra nastiness of making the structure the wrong size.
o) The mc_tls field was not being saved by sendsig. As a result, the TLS base
would always be set to NULL when restoring from a signal handler.
Thanks to gonzo for helping track down a bunch of other TLS bugs that came out
of tracking these down.
and offset it only if requested by RDHWR handler. Otherwise things
get overly complicated - we need to track whether address passsed in
request for setting td_md.md_tls is already offseted or not.
version was missing an else and would always use the n64 TP_OFFSET. Eliminate
some duplication of logic here.
It may be worth getting rid of some of the ifdefs and introducing gratuitous
SV_ILP32 runtime checks on n64 kernels without COMPAT_FREEBSD32 and on o32
kernels, similarly to how PowerPC works.
using the o32 ABI. This mostly follows nwhitehorn's lead in implementing
COMPAT_FREEBSD32 on powerpc64.
o) Add a new type to the freebsd32 compat layer, time32_t, which is time_t in the
32-bit ABI being used. Since the MIPS port is relatively-new, even the 32-bit
ABIs use a 64-bit time_t.
o) Because time{spec,val}32 has the same size and layout as time{spec,val} on MIPS
with 32-bit compatibility, then, disable some code which assumes otherwise
wrongly when built for MIPS. A more general macro to check in this case would
seem like a good idea eventually. If someone adds support for using n32
userland with n64 kernels on MIPS, then they will have to add a variety of
flags related to each piece of the ABI that can vary. That's probably the
right time to generalize further.
o) Add MIPS to the list of architectures which use PAD64_REQUIRED in the
freebsd32 compat code. Probably this should be generalized at some point.
Reviewed by: gonzo
handle address, where we're using handles as raw addresses.
This fixes devices with subregions on Octeon PCI specifically, and likely also on
MIPS more generally, where there isn't another bus_space in use that was doing the
math already.
long for specifying a boundary constraint.
- Change bus_dma tags to use bus_addr_t instead of bus_size_t for boundary
constraints.
These allow boundary constraints to be fully expressed for cases where
sizeof(bus_addr_t) != sizeof(bus_size_t). Specifically, it allows a
driver to properly specify a 4GB boundary in a PAE kernel.
Note that this cannot be safely MFC'd without a lot of compat shims due
to KBI changes, so I do not intend to merge it.
Reviewed by: scottl
- Reserver respective number of addresses for managment port
- octm uses base address directly
- other drivers get MACs on "first come first served" basis
Reviewed by: juli
- Centralize address assignment
- Make sure managment ports get first MAC address in pool
- Properly propagate fail if address allocation failed
Submitted by: Andrew Duane <aduane@juniper.net>
set all three of the kernel, supervisor, and user-mode 64-bit mode
flags. While FreeBSD does not currently use the supervisor ring (and
hence this is effectively a NOP on most systems), doing this avoids
triggering an exception on 64-bit MIPS CPUs that don't support 32-bit
compatibility mode, and therefore don't allow clearing the SX bit.
Reviewed by: gonzo
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, SRI International
Reading register $29 with RDHWR is becoming the de-facto standard to
implement TLS. According to linux-mips wiki, MIPS Technologies has
reserved hardware register $29 for ABI use. Furthermore current GCC
makes the following assumptions:
- RDHWR is natively available or otherwise emulated by the kernel
- Register $29 holds the TLS pointer
Submitted by: Robert Millan <rmh@debian.org>
of root HUB. Although it is initialized with port index of the
device's parent hub, which is worng. So track the USB tree up to
root HUB and initialize this filed ptroprly
Rename port_index to root_port_index in order to reflect its
real semantics.
on-board, glued to the AR71xx CPU. These may forgo separate WMAC EEPROMs
(which store configuration and calibration data) and instead store
it in the main board SPI flash.
Normally the NIC reads the EEPROM attached to it to setup various PCI
configuration registers. If this isn't done, the device will probe as
something different (eg 0x168c:abcd, or 0x168c:ff??.) Other setup registers
are also written to which may control important functions.
This introduces a new compile option, AR71XX_ATH_EEPROM, which enables the
use of this particular code. The ART offset in the SPI flash can be
specified as a hint against the relevant slot/device number, for example:
hint.pcib.0.bus.0.17.0.ath_fixup_addr=0x1fff1000
hint.pcib.0.bus.0.18.0.ath_fixup_addr=0x1fff5000
TODO:
* Think of a better name;
* Make the PCIe version of this fixup code also use this option;
* Maybe also check slot 19;
* This has to happen _before_ the SPI flash is set from memory-mapped
to SPI-IO - so document that somewhere.
- Use Elf32_Addr as default, the only field that is
64 bitw wide is R_MIPS_64
- Add R_MIPS_HIGHER and R_MIPS_HGHEST handlers
- Handle R_MIPS_HI16 and R_MIPS_LO16 for both .rel and
.rela sections
This was preventing the ath driver from being loaded at runtime.
It worked fine when compiled statically into the kernel but not when
kldload'ed after the system booted.
The root cause was that PCIR_INTLINE (register 60) was being
overwritten by zeros when register 62 was being written to.
A subsequent read of this register would return 0, and thus
the rest of the PCI glue assumed an IRQ resource had already
been allocated. This caused the device to fail to attach at
runtime as the device itself didn't contain any IRQ resources.
TODO: go back over the ar71xx and ar724x PCI config read/write
code and ensure it's correct.
comparing to struct timeval. for clocktime they should be
1..7 and 1..12 respectively
- CAPK-0100ND uses RTC without centruy bit (DS1307) so set it 21st
This is an AR71xx based board with 8MB flash, 64MB RAM, a
Mini-PCI+ slot (see below) and a single 10/100/1000baseT
ethernet port. It also has two USB ports.
This is an easier board than most to add as it doesn't have a
switch PHY on-board. This made it (mostly) trivial to craft a
working configuration.
Things to note:
* This, like most other reference boards, use uboot rather then
redboot. It means that you typically have to manually flash
both the kernel and rootfs partitions.
* Since there's currently no (nice) way to extract out the
ethernet MAC and RAM from the uboot environment, the RAM
will default to 32mb and the MAC will be something very
incorrect. I'll try to fix this up in a subsequent commit
or two, even if it's just some hard-coded nonsense in
ar71xx_machdep.c for now.
* The board is designed for a specific model of mini-PCI+
NIC which never made it into production. Normal mini-PCI
NICs will work fine; if you happen to have the NIC in question
then it will work fine with this board.
bits.
The ROUERSTATION and RSPRO variants contain:
* the board specific bits (eg the RTC for RSPRO, later on it'll
include the GPIO/LED definitions);
* the boot specific bits (eg, on-board flash, usb flash, etc).
For now the AR71XX_BASE file contains the common board config,
drivers and net80211/ath wireless drivers.
I'll follow this up with config files for the other boards I
have (eg the Ubiquiti LSSR71, as well as some Mikrotik boards
that use the AR71XX and atheros reference boards) which will
be quite easy to do now.
performance issues.
* Access to the GPIO bus is already locked by requesting
and releasing the bus - thus the lock isn't really needed
for each GPIO pin change.
* Don't lock and unlock the GPIO bus for -each- i2c access -
the i2c bus code is already doing this by calling the upper
layer callback to request/release the bus. This thus locks
the bus for the entirety of the transaction.
TODO:
* Further verify that everything is correctly requesting/
releasing the GPIO bus.
* Look at how to lock the GPIO pin configuration stuff,
potentially by locking/unlocking the bus at the gpiobus
layer.
At the moment grab and ungrab methods of all console drivers are no-ops.
Current intended meaning of the calls is that the kernel takes control of
console input. In the future the semantics may be extended to mean that
the calling thread takes full ownership of the console (e.g. console
output from other threads could be suspended).
Inspired by: bde
MFC after: 2 months
* Add in a default GPIO section for AR91XX_BASE.hints, which doesn't
define the GPIO function masks or any GPIO pines.
* Add in the GPIO line definitions for LEDs and GPIO pins for the
TP-WR1043nd.
I've verified the LEDs work fine using gpioset.
config and function mask setup.
* "gpiomask" now specifies which GPIO pins to enable, for devices to bind to.
* "function_set" allows bits in the function register to be set at GPIO setup.
* "function_clear" allows bits in the function register to be cleared at
GPIO setup.
The function_set/function_clear bits allow for individual GPIO pins to either
drive a GPIO line or an alternate function - eg USB, JTAG, etc. This allows
for things like CS1/CS2 be enabled for those boards w/ >1 SPI device connected,
or disabling JTAG for the AR7240 (which is apparently needed ..)
I've verified this on the AR71xx.
This patch should remove the need for kldunload of USB
controller drivers at suspend and kldload of USB controller
drivers at resume.
This patch also fixes some build issues in avr32dci.c
MFC after: 2 weeks
the second-last 64k seems to be the default firmware board configuration
area.
Since I have no idea whether uboot uses it or not - and it's prefixed
with an atheros eeprom signature (0xaa55), I figure the safest thing
to do is mark it as read-only.
I've modified my local tplink firmware building program to generate
a board configuration section - which is separate to this partition.
It's located in the 64k _before_ this particular 64k.
The firmware build program from OpenWRT never initialises those
values and the firmware images from tplink also leave it 0x0, so I
don't currently know what the exact, correct details should be.
the ar71xx platform code should assume a uboot or redboot environment.
The current code gets very confused (and just crashes) on a uboot
environment, where each attribute=value pair is in a single entry.
Redboot on the other hand stores it as "attribute", "value", "attribute",
"value", ...
This allows the kernel to boot on a TP-LINK TL-WR1043ND from flash,
where the uboot environment gets setup. This didn't show up during a netboot
as "tftpboot" and "go" don't setup the uboot environment variables.
The default flash layout gives only 1 megabyte for the kernel, gzipped.
The uboot firmware running on this device only supports gzip, not lzma, so
we actually _do_ have to try and slim the kernel down a bit.
But, since I can't actually do that at the present, I'm opting to:
* extend the kernel from 1mb to 2mb;
* have rootfs fill the rest of that, save 64k;
* eventually I'll hide a 64k config partition at the end, between the
end of rootfs and the ART (radio configuration data.)
The uboot firmware doesn't care about the partition layout. It just
expects the kernel application image to sit at 0xbf020000 (right after
the 128k uboot image.) The uboot header isn't actually read either -
it's "faked" from a "tplink" flash image header. So as long as the
map configuration here matches what is being written out via the
tplink firmware generator, everything is a-ok.
A previous commit disabled compiling the AR9130 support in the default
HAL build in the kernel. Since the AR9130 support won't actually function
without AH_SUPPORT_AR9130 (and that abomination needs to be undone at some
point, in order to allow USB 11n NICs to also work), we now have to
explicitly compile it in.
But since the 11n RF backends don't (currently) join the RF linker set,
one has to compile in _an_ RF backend for the HAL to compile.
At some point it would be nice to correctly update the bus glue to make
this "correct", including having the DDR flush occur in the right spot
(ie, any AHB interrupt.)
one. Interestingly, these are actually the default for quite some time
(bus_generic_driver_added(9) since r52045 and bus_generic_print_child(9)
since r52045) but even recently added device drivers do this unnecessarily.
Discussed with: jhb, marcel
- While at it, use DEVMETHOD_END.
Discussed with: jhb
- Also while at it, use __FBSDID.
The dcache flush has to be done using the core control registers before
splitting the L1D cache by enabling the hardware threads.
Also replace .word calls for mfcr/mtcr with a C macro.
In collaboration with: prabhath at netlogicmicro com
* Update message station (CMS) code, read queue ids from PCI header.
* Use interrupts to wakeup message handling threads on 3XX
* Update PIC code, read interrupt information from PCI header instead
of using fixed values.
* Update PCI interrupt handling for the PIC change.
* Update code for getting chip frequency, new code support XLP 3XX
* Misc style(9) fixes
In collaboration with: prabhath at netlogicmicro com (CMS/PIC)
venkatesh at netlogicmicro.com (PCI)
mco_icache_sync_range was earlier set to mipsNN_icache_sync_range_index_32
which is not necessary, revert this.
Also, the data cache is coherent so write back is not really needed. This
change is experimental.
Create std.XLP for configuration options, which is included by the
conf files. The files XLP, XLPN32 and XLP64 will have mostly ABI related
options.
Also move uart and pci to mips/nlm/std.xlp since all XLP configurations
needs these devices.
Obtained from: prabhath at netlogicmicro com (intial version)
The pmap update_page/invalidate_page/invalidate_all operations has to be
done only on active cpus. In the simplest case, if the process is not
active on any other CPUs, we can just do the operation on the current CPU.
This change replaces the call to smp_rendezvous() for these operations with
smp_rendezvous_cpus() in case there more than one active CPU, or with a direct
function call if there is just one active CPU.
This change give significant performance increase in fork/exec benchmarks
on XLR/XLS/XLP with 32 cpus.
Reviewed by: alc
all the architectures.
The option allows to mount non-MPSAFE filesystem. Without it, the
kernel will refuse to mount a non-MPSAFE filesytem.
This patch is part of the effort of killing non-MPSAFE filesystems
from the tree.
No MFC is expected for this patch.
Tested by: gianni
Reviewed by: kib
The SYSCTL_NODE macro defines a list that stores all child-elements of
that node. If there's no SYSCTL_DECL macro anywhere else, there's no
reason why it shouldn't be static.
and use these new options in the mips pmap.
Wake up the page daemon in vm_page_alloc_freelist() if the number of free
and cached pages becomes too low.
Tidy up vm_page_alloc_init(). In particular, add a comment about an
important restriction on its use.
Tested by: jchandra@
implement a deprecated FPU control interface in addition to the
standard one. To make this clearer, further deprecate ieeefp.h
by not declaring the function prototypes except on architectures
that implement them already.
Currently i386 and amd64 implement the ieeefp.h interface for
compatibility, and for fp[gs]etprec(), which doesn't exist on
most other hardware. Powerpc, sparc64, and ia64 partially implement
it and probably shouldn't, and other architectures don't implement it
at all.
If we handle an interrupt just before the 'wait' and the interrupt
schedules some work, we need to skip the 'wait' call. The simple solution
of calling sched_runnable() with interrupts disabled immediately before
wait still leaves a window after the call and before 'wait' in which
the same issue can occur.
The solution implemented is to check the EPC in the interrupt handler, and
if it is in a region before the 'wait' call, to fix up the EPC to skip the
wait call.
Reported/analysed by: adrian
Fix suggested by: kib
Reviewed by: jmallett, imp
- update xlp_machdep.c to read arguments from FDT if FDT support is
compiled in.
- define rmi_uart_bus_space, and use it as fdtbus_bs_tag
- update conf files for FDT support
- add default dts file xlp-basic.dts
Because driver is accessing a common MII structure in
mii_pollstat(), updating user supplied structure should be done
before dropping a driver lock.
Reported by: Karim (fodillemlinkarimi <> gmail dot com)
Reading /dev/mem in 64 bit kernel crashes. This is because the page
used to call uiomove_fromphys() from memrw() does not have md.pv_list
initialized correctly.
The fix is to call pmap_page_init() on the page to initialize it.
Wrong in that it must be guarded (it's configurable)
and bogus in that there's absolutely no rationale for
it not default to a page size like all other archs.
o Remove redundant lookups of base address in cf_identify
o Fix some indenting issues
o Fix an identification bug that uses DRQ to checlk for ident block
returned. The correct spec is to look for BSY to be cleared.
Reviewed by: imp, marcel
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc
Author: Andrew Duane
octeon_ap_boot is not a bitmask. It holds the CPU Id of the
AP currently being started. As such there's no need to make
it a 64-bit integral and we're not limited to 64 CPUs.
Reported by: jmallet
Obtained from: Andre Duane
patch modifies makesyscalls.sh to prefix all of the non-compatibility
calls (e.g. not linux_, freebsd32_) with sys_ and updates the kernel
entry points and all places in the code that use them. It also
fixes an additional name space collision between the kernel function
psignal and the libc function of the same name by renaming the kernel
psignal kern_psignal(). By introducing this change now we will ease future
MFCs that change syscalls.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Approved by: re (bz)
flags field. Updates to the atomic flags are performed using the atomic
ops on the containing word, do not require any vm lock to be held, and
are non-blocking. The vm_page_aflag_set(9) and vm_page_aflag_clear(9)
functions are provided to modify afalgs.
Document the changes to flags field to only require the page lock.
Introduce vm_page_reference(9) function to provide a stable KPI and
KBI for filesystems like tmpfs and zfs which need to mark a page as
referenced.
Reviewed by: alc, attilio
Tested by: marius, flo (sparc64); andreast (powerpc, powerpc64)
Approved by: re (bz)
* Update the hardware access register definitions and functions to bring
them in line with other Netlogic software.
* Update the platform bus to use PCI even for on-chip devices. Add a dummy
PCI driver to ignore on-chip devices which do not need driver.
* Provide memory and IRQ resource allocation code for on-chip devices
which cannot get it from PCI config.
* add support for on-chip PCI and USB interfaces.
* update conf files, enable pci and retain old MAXCPU until we can support
>32 cpus.
Approved by: re(kib), jmallett
to VPO_UNMANAGED (and also making the flag protected by the vm object
lock, instead of vm page queue lock).
- Mark the fake pages with both PG_FICTITIOUS (as it is now) and
VPO_UNMANAGED. As a consequence, pmap code now can use use just
VPO_UNMANAGED to decide whether the page is unmanaged.
Reviewed by: alc
Tested by: pho (x86, previous version), marius (sparc64),
marcel (arm, ia64, powerpc), ray (mips)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Approved by: re (bz)
Better construction of CPU mask in platform_cpu_mask().
Release cores still in reset when platform_start_ap() is called.
Reviewed by: imp, marcel
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc
Author: Andrew Duane
Approved by: re (kib)
It seems that "info as" is not much precise on what expect by pseudo-op
.word, by the way.
No MFC is previewed for this patch.
Tested by: andreast, pluknet
Approved by: re (kib)
From now on, default values for FreeBSD will be 64 maxiumum supported
CPUs on amd64 and ia64 and 128 for XLP. All the other architectures
seem already capped appropriately (with the exception of sparc64 which
needs further support on jalapeno flavour).
Bump __FreeBSD_version in order to reflect KBI/KPI brekage introduced
during the infrastructure cleanup for supporting MAXCPU > 32. This
covers cpumask_t retiral too.
The switch is considered completed at the present time, so for whatever
bug you may experience that is reconducible to that area, please report
immediately.
Requested by: marcel, jchandra
Tested by: pluknet, sbruno
Approved by: re (kib)
This patch is going to help in cases like mips flavours where you
want a more granular support on MAXCPU.
No MFC is previewed for this patch.
Tested by: pluknet
Approved by: re (kib)
sintrcnt/sintrnames which are symbols containing the size of the 2
tables.
- For amd64/i386 remove the storage of intr* stuff from assembly files.
This area can be widely improved by applying the same to other
architectures and likely finding an unified approach among them and
move the whole code to be MI. More work in this area is expected to
happen fairly soon.
No MFC is previewed for this patch.
Tested by: pluknet
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: re (kib)
This patch adds support for the Netlogic XLP mips64 processors in
the common MIPS code. The changes are :
- Add CPU_NLM processor type
- Add cases for CPU_NLM, mostly were CPU_RMI is used.
- Update cache flush changes for CPU_NLM
- Add kernel build configuration files for xLP.
In collaboration with: Prabhath Raman <prabhathpr at netlogicmicro com>
Approved by: bz(re), jmallett, imp(mips)
Allow changing the trampoline ABI with makeoptions, this will allow
us to have a trampoline with a different ABI from the kernel.
Useful in cases where we have to boot a 64 bit kernel from a
bootloader which supports only 32 bit or vice versa.
Approved by: bz(re), jmallett, imp
mask bits to control register and control bits to mask register.
The former causes ICW1_RESET|ICW1_LTIM combination to be written to
control register, which on QEMU results in "level sensitive irq not
supported" error.
Submitted by: Robert Millan <rmh@debian.org>
option to vm_object_page_remove() asserts that the specified range of pages
is not mapped, or more precisely that none of these pages have any managed
mappings. Thus, vm_object_page_remove() need not call pmap_remove_all() on
the pages.
This change not only saves time by eliminating pointless calls to
pmap_remove_all(), but it also eliminates an inconsistency in the use of
pmap_remove_all() versus related functions, like pmap_remove_write(). It
eliminates harmless but pointless calls to pmap_remove_all() that were being
performed on PG_UNMANAGED pages.
Update all of the existing assertions on pmap_remove_all() to reflect this
change.
Reviewed by: kib
signalled when the attribute address for the CF is 0 in the octeon
sysinfo structure. In this mode, the DATA port is 16-bits, but the
other ports are 8-bits, but on a 16-bit bus (so you have to access it
a short at a time, but only believe the lower byte). See the code for
more details on this slightly odd arrangement. I'm still not 100%
happy with the abstractions here on many levels (starting with the
globals for these settings, on down to no bus_space use, etc), but the
driver had these problems before the change.
Also, clean up the code a bit to make this support easier, and the
code a bit easier to read. I tried to follow existing style, but may
have missed a few spots. Add some comments.
Fix probe/attach routine to return a proper error for the simulator.
With this change, my EBH5200 eval board now recognizes the CF well
enough to boot to the login prompt. Before it would say it never
became ready. My CN3010-EVB-HS5 still boots properly. My older
CN3860-based board won't load the 64-bit kernel, either before or
after the change, and I didn't chase that down.
be brought up in the order they are enumerated in the device tree (in
particular, that thread 0 on each core be brought up first). The SLIST
through which we loop to start the CPUs has all of its entries added with
SLIST_INSERT_HEAD(), which means it is in reverse order of enumeration
and so AP startup would always fail in such situations (causing a machine
check or RTAS failure). Fix this by changing the SLIST into an STAILQ,
and inserting new CPUs at the end.
Reviewed by: jhb
Fix arguments passing to _long() version of atomic function for mips.
The native implementation is bogus in that regard and offers the same
problem solved for powerpc as r222198, but mips' guys just wanted a
small and self-contained patch for mips rather than rewriting the
whole support.
Reviewed by: art, imp
Tested by: gonzo
MFC after: 2 weeks
architectures (i386, for example) the virtual memory space may be
constrained enough that 2MB is a large chunk. Use 64K for arches
other than amd64 and ia64, with special handling for sparc64 due to
differing hardware.
Also commit the comment changes to kmem_init_zero_region() that I
missed due to not saving the file. (Darn the unfamiliar development
environment).
Arch maintainers, please feel free to adjust ZERO_REGION_SIZE as you
see fit.
Requested by: alc
MFC after: 1 week
MFC with: r221853
(reporting IFM_LOOP based on BMCR_LOOP is left in place though as
it might provide useful for debugging). For most mii(4) drivers it
was unclear whether the PHYs driven by them actually support
loopback or not. Moreover, typically loopback mode also needs to
be activated on the MAC, which none of the Ethernet drivers using
mii(4) implements. Given that loopback media has no real use (and
obviously hardly had a chance to actually work) besides for driver
development (which just loopback mode should be sufficient for
though, i.e one doesn't necessary need support for loopback media)
support for it is just dropped as both NetBSD and OpenBSD already
did quite some time ago.
- Let mii_phy_add_media() also announce the support of IFM_NONE.
- Restructure the PHY entry points to use a structure of entry points
instead of discrete function pointers, and extend this to include
a "reset" entry point. Make sure any PHY-specific reset routine is
always used, and provide one for lxtphy(4) which disables MII
interrupts (as is done for a few other PHYs we have drivers for).
This includes changing NIC drivers which previously just called the
generic mii_phy_reset() to now actually call the PHY-specific reset
routine, which might be crucial in some cases. While at it, the
redundant checks in these NIC drivers for mii->mii_instance not being
zero before calling the reset routines were removed because as soon
as one PHY driver attaches mii->mii_instance is incremented and we
hardly can end up in their media change callbacks etc if no PHY driver
has attached as mii_attach() would have failed in that case and not
attach a miibus(4) instance.
Consequently, NIC drivers now no longer should call mii_phy_reset()
directly, so it was removed from EXPORT_SYMS.
- Add a mii_phy_dev_attach() as a companion helper to mii_phy_dev_probe().
The purpose of that function is to perform the common steps to attach
a PHY driver instance and to hook it up to the miibus(4) instance and to
optionally also handle the probing, addition and initialization of the
supported media. So all a PHY driver without any special requirements
has to do in its bus attach method is to call mii_phy_dev_attach()
along with PHY-specific MIIF_* flags, a pointer to its PHY functions
and the add_media set to one. All PHY drivers were updated to take
advantage of mii_phy_dev_attach() as appropriate. Along with these
changes the capability mask was added to the mii_softc structure so
PHY drivers taking advantage of mii_phy_dev_attach() but still
handling media on their own do not need to fiddle with the MII attach
arguments anyway.
- Keep track of the PHY offset in the mii_softc structure. This is done
for compatibility with NetBSD/OpenBSD.
- Keep track of the PHY's OUI, model and revision in the mii_softc
structure. Several PHY drivers require this information also after
attaching and previously had to wrap their own softc around mii_softc.
NetBSD/OpenBSD also keep track of the model and revision on their
mii_softc structure. All PHY drivers were updated to take advantage
as appropriate.
- Convert the mebers of the MII data structure to unsigned where
appropriate. This is partly inspired by NetBSD/OpenBSD.
- According to IEEE 802.3-2002 the bits actually have to be reversed
when mapping an OUI to the MII ID registers. All PHY drivers and
miidevs where changed as necessary. Actually this now again allows to
largely share miidevs with NetBSD, which fixed this problem already
9 years ago. Consequently miidevs was synced as far as possible.
- Add MIIF_NOMANPAUSE and mii_phy_flowstatus() calls to drivers that
weren't explicitly converted to support flow control before. It's
unclear whether flow control actually works with these but typically
it should and their net behavior should be more correct with these
changes in place than without if the MAC driver sets MIIF_DOPAUSE.
Obtained from: NetBSD (partially)
Reviewed by: yongari (earlier version), silence on arch@ and net@
of endian-ness issues with the AR724x.
From Luiz:
* Fix the bus space tag used so endian-ness is correctly handled;
* Only do the workaround for the AR7240; AR7241/AR7242 (PB92)
don't require this
From me:
* Add a read flush from openwrt
Submitted by: Luiz Otavio O Souza
This is reported to work on the AR7240 based Ubiquiti Rocket M5
but I haven't tested it on that hardware. I also don't yet have
it fully working on the AR7242 based development board here;
probe/attach functions but the register space resource looks like
the endian-ness is wrong (0x10000000 instead of 0x00001000).o
Further digging will be required.
Submitted by: Luiz Otavio O Souza