Commit Graph

821 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bill Paul
5d3b74e4c1 - In subr_ndis.c:ndis_init_event(), initialize events as notification
objects rather than synchronization objects. When a sync object is
  signaled, only the first thread waiting on it is woken up, and then
  it's automatically reset to the not-signaled state. When a
  notification object is signaled, all threads waiting on it will
  be woken up, and it remains in the signaled state until someone
  resets it manually. We want the latter behavior for NDIS events.

- In kern_ndis.c:ndis_convert_res(), we have to create a temporary
  copy of the list returned by BUS_GET_RESOURCE_LIST(). When the PCI
  bus code probes resources for a given device, it enters them into
  a singly linked list, head first. The result is that traversing
  this list gives you the resources in reverse order. This means when
  we create the Windows resource list, it will be in reverse order too.
  Unfortunately, this can hose drivers for devices with multiple I/O
  ranges of the same type, like, say, two memory mapped I/O regions (one
  for registers, one to map the NVRAM/bootrom/whatever). Some drivers
  test the range size to figure out which region is which, but others
  just assume that the resources will be listed in ascending order from
  lowest numbered BAR to highest. Reversing the order means such drivers
  will choose the wrong resource as their I/O register range.

  Since we can't traverse the resource SLIST backwards, we have to
  make a temporary copy of the list in the right order and then build
  the Windows resource list from that. I suppose we could just fix
  the PCI bus code to use a TAILQ instead, but then I'd have to track
  down all the consumers of the BUS_GET_RESOURCE_LIST() and fix them
  too.
2004-03-25 18:31:52 +00:00
Bill Paul
52bfac6de0 - In kern_ndis.c, implement ndis_unsched(), the complement to ndis_sched(),
which pulls a job off a thread work queue (assuming it hasn't run yet).
  This is needed for KeRemoveQueueDpc().

- In subr_ntoskrnl.c, implement KeInsertQueueDpc() and KeRemoveQueueDpc(),
  to go with KeInitializeDpc() to round out the API. Also change the
  KeTimer implementation to use this API instead of the private
  timer callout scheduler. Functionality of the timer API remains
  unchanged, but we get a couple new Windows kernel API routines and
  more closely imitate the way thing works in Windows. (As of yet
  I haven't encountered any drivers that use KeInsertQueueDpc() or
  KeRemoveQueueDpc(), but it doesn't hurt to have them.)
2004-03-25 08:23:08 +00:00
Bill Paul
150514c0eb Remove another case of grabbing Giant before doing a kthread_exit()
which is now no longer needed.
2004-03-22 22:46:22 +00:00
Bill Paul
c5d019ec55 I'm a dumbass: the test in the MOD_SHUTDOWN case in ndis_modevent()
that checks to see if any devices are still in the devlist was reversed.
2004-03-22 18:34:37 +00:00
Bill Paul
e34e2a168a The Intel 2200BG NDIS driver does an alloca() of about 5000 bytes
when it associates with a net. Because FreeBSD's kstack size is only
2 pages by default, this blows the stack and causes a double fault.

To deal with this, we now create all our kthreads with 8 stack pages.
Also, we now run all timer callouts in the ndis swi thread (since
they would otherwise run in the clock ithread, whose stack is too
small). It happens that the alloca() in this case was occuring within
the interrupt handler, which was already running in the ndis swi
thread, but I want to deal with the callouts too just to be extra
safe.

NOTE: this will only work if you update vm_machdep.c with the change
I just committed. If you don't include this fix, setting the number
of stack pages with kthread_create() has essentially no effect.
2004-03-22 00:41:41 +00:00
Peter Wemm
95c6291685 Change (yet again, sorry!) the path of the 32 bit ld-elf.so.1. 2004-03-21 01:22:24 +00:00
Bill Paul
f6159e042d - Rewrite the timer and event API routines in subr_ndis.c so that they
are actually layered on top of the KeTimer API in subr_ntoskrnl.c, just
  as it is in Windows. This reduces code duplication and more closely
  imitates the way things are done in Windows.

- Modify ndis_encode_parm() to deal with the case where we have
  a registry key expressed as a hex value ("0x1") which is being
  read via NdisReadConfiguration() as an int. Previously, we tried
  to decode things like "0x1" with strtol() using a base of 10, which
  would always yield 0. This is what was causing problems with the
  Intel 2200BG Centrino 802.11g driver: the .inf file that comes
  with it has a key called RadioEnable with a value of 0x1. We
  incorrectly decoded this value to '0' when it was queried, hence
  the driver thought we wanted the radio turned off.

- In if_ndis.c, most drivers don't accept NDIS_80211_AUTHMODE_AUTO,
  but NDIS_80211_AUTHMODE_SHARED may not be right in some cases,
  so for now always use NDIS_80211_AUTHMODE_OPEN.

NOTE: There is still one problem with the Intel 2200BG driver: it
happens that the kernel stack in Windows is larger than the kernel
stack in FreeBSD. The 2200BG driver sometimes eats up more than 2
pages of stack space, which can lead to a double fault panic.
For the moment, I got things to work by adding the following to
my kernel config file:

options         KSTACK_PAGES=8

I'm pretty sure 8 is too big; I just picked this value out of a hat
as a test, and it happened to work, so I left it. 4 pages might be
enough. Unfortunately, I don't think you can dynamically give a
thread a larger stack, so I'm not sure how to handle this short of
putting a note in the man page about it and dealing with the flood
of mail from people who never read man pages.
2004-03-20 23:39:43 +00:00
John Baldwin
b7e23e826c - Replace wait1() with a kern_wait() function that accepts the pid,
options, status pointer and rusage pointer as arguments.  It is up to
  the caller to copyout the status and rusage to userland if needed.  This
  lets us axe the 'compat' argument and hide all that functionality in
  owait(), by the way.  This also cleans up some locking in kern_wait()
  since it no longer has to drop locks around copyout() since all the
  copyout()'s are deferred.
- Convert owait(), wait4(), and the various ABI compat wait() syscalls to
  use kern_wait() rather than wait1() or wait4().  This removes a bit
  more stackgap usage.

Tested on:	i386
Compiled on:	i386, alpha, amd64
2004-03-17 20:00:00 +00:00
Tim J. Robbins
7b0d017245 Use vfs_nmount() to mount linprocfs filesystems in linux_mount();
linprocfs doesn't support the old mount interface.
2004-03-16 09:05:56 +00:00
Tim J. Robbins
2ba9b76668 Correct size argument passed to copyinstr() in linux_mount(): mntfromname
and mntonname are both MNAMELEN characters long, not MFSNAMELEN.
2004-03-16 08:37:19 +00:00
Bill Paul
f79e9df73b Add vectors for _snprintf() and _vsnprintf() (redirected straight to
snprintf() and vsnprintf() in FreeBSD kernel land).

This is needed by the Intel Centrino 2200BG driver. Unfortunately, this
driver still doesn't work right with Project Evil even with this tweak,
but I'm unable to diagnose the problem since I don't have access to a
sample card.
2004-03-15 16:39:03 +00:00
Peter Wemm
73f3495386 Move the non-MD machine/dvcfg.h and machine/physio_proc.h to a common
MI area before they proliferate more.
2004-03-13 19:46:27 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
651b11eaf2 Remove unused second arg to vfinddev().
Don't call addaliasu() on VBLK nodes.
2004-03-11 16:33:11 +00:00
Bill Paul
0bf7b204e3 Fix mind-o: sanity check in ndis_disable_ndis() is not sane. 2004-03-11 09:50:00 +00:00
Bill Paul
1e35c8564a Fix the problem with the Cisco Aironet 340 PCMCIA card. Most newer drivers
for Windows are deserialized miniports. Such drivers maintain their own
queues and do their own locking. This particular driver is not deserialized
though, and we need special support to handle it correctly.

Typically, in the ndis_rxeof() handler, we pass all incoming packets
directly to (*ifp->if_input)(). This in turn may cause another thread
to run and preempt us, and the packet may actually be processed and
then released before we even exit the ndis_rxeof() routine. The
problem with this is that releasing a packet calls the ndis_return_packet()
function, which hands the packet and its buffers back to the driver.
Calling ndis_return_packet() before ndis_rxeof() returns will screw
up the driver's internal queues since, not being deserialized,
it does no locking.

To avoid this problem, if we detect a serialized driver (by checking
the attribute flags passed to NdisSetAttributesEx(), we use an alternate
ndis_rxeof() handler, ndis_rxeof_serial(), which puts the call to
(*ifp->if_input)() on the NDIS SWI work queue. This guarantees the
packet won't be processed until after ndis_rxeof_serial() returns.

Note that another approach is to always copy the packet data into
another mbuf and just let the driver retain ownership of the ndis_packet
structure (ndis_return_packet() never needs to be called in this
case). I'm not sure which method is faster.
2004-03-11 09:40:00 +00:00
Bill Paul
a24cc63af9 Fix several issues related to the KeInitializeTimer() etc... API stuff
that I added recently:

- When a periodic timer fires, it's automatically re-armed. We must
  make sure to re-arm the timer _before_ invoking any caller-supplied
  defered procedure call: the DPC may choose to call KeCancelTimer(),
  and re-arming the timer after the DPC un-does the effect of the
  cancel.

- Fix similar issue with periodic timers in subr_ndis.c.

- When calling KeSetTimer() or KeSetTimerEx(), if the timer is
  already pending, untimeout() it first before timeout()ing
  it again.

- The old Atheros driver for the 5211 seems to use KeSetTimerEx()
  incorrectly, or at the very least in a very strange way that
  doesn't quite follow the Microsoft documentation. In one case,
  it calls KeSetTimerEx() with a duetime of 0 and a period of 5000.
  The Microsoft documentation says that negative duetime values
  are relative to the current time and positive values are absolute.
  But it doesn't say what's supposed to happen with positive values
  that less than the current time, i.e. absolute values that are
  in the past.

  Lacking any further information, I have decided that timers with
  positive duetimes that are in the past should fire right away (or
  in our case, after only 1 tick). This also takes care of the other
  strange usage in the Atheros driver, where the duetime is
  specified as 500000 and the period is 50. I think someone may
  have meant to use -500000 and misinterpreted the documentation.

- Also modified KeWaitForSingleObject() and KeWaitForMultipleObjects()
  to make the same duetime adjustment, since they have the same rules
  regarding timeout values.

- Cosmetic: change name of 'timeout' variable in KeWaitForSingleObject()
  and KeWaitForMultipleObjects() to 'duetime' to avoid senseless
  (though harmless) overlap with timeout() function name.

With these fixes, I can get the 5211 card to associate properly with
my adhoc net using driver AR5211.SYS version 2.4.1.6.
2004-03-10 07:43:11 +00:00
Bill Paul
d329ad6035 Add preliminary support for PCMCIA devices in addition to PCI/cardbus.
if_ndis.c has been split into if_ndis_pci.c and if_ndis_pccard.c.
The ndiscvt(8) utility should be able to parse device info for PCMCIA
devices now. The ndis_alloc_amem() has moved from kern_ndis.c to
if_ndis_pccard.c so that kern_ndis.c no longer depends on pccard.

NOTE: this stuff is not guaranteed to work 100% correctly yet. So
far I have been able to load/init my PCMCIA Cisco Aironet 340 card,
but it crashes in the interrupt handler. The existing support for
PCI/cardbus devices should still work as before.
2004-03-07 02:49:06 +00:00
John Baldwin
6074439965 kthread_exit() no longer requires Giant, so don't force callers to acquire
Giant just to call kthread_exit().

Requested by:	many
2004-03-05 22:42:17 +00:00
Bill Paul
51d22ccf42 - Some older Atheros drivers want KeInitializeTimer(), so implement it,
along with KeInitializeTimerEx(), KeSetTimer(), KeSetTimerEx(),
  KeCancelTimer(), KeReadStateTimer() and KeInitializeDpc(). I don't
  know for certain that these will make the Atheros driver happy since
  I don't have the card/driver combo needed to test it, but these are
  fairly independent so they shouldn't break anything else.

- Debugger() is present even in kernels without options DDB, so no
  conditional compilation is necessary (pointed out by bde).

- Remove the extra km_acquirecnt member that I added to struct kmutant
  and embed it within an unused portion of the structure instead, so that
  we don't make the structure larger than it's defined to be in Windows.
  I don't know what crack I was smoking when I decided it was ok to do
  this, but it's worn off now.
2004-03-04 23:04:02 +00:00
Bill Paul
a787e5ecf8 Add sanity checks to the ndis_packet and ndis_buffer pool handling
routines to guard against problems caused by (possibly) buggy drivers.

The RealTek 8180 wireless driver calls NdisFreeBuffer() to release
some of its buffers _after_ it's already called NdisFreeBufferPool()
to destroy the pool to which the buffers belong. In our implementation,
this error causes NdisFreeBuffer() to touch stale heap memory.

If you are running a release kernel, and hence have INVARIANTS et al
turned off, it turns out nothing happens. But if you're using a
development kernel config with INVARIANTS on, the malloc()/free()
sanity checks will scribble over the pool memory with 0xdeadc0de
once it's released so that any attempts to touch it will cause a
trap, and indeed this is what happens. It happens that I run 5.2-RELEASE
on my laptop, so when I tested the rtl8180.sys driver, it worked fine
for me, but people trying to run it with development systems checked
out or cvsupped from -current would get a page fault on driver load.

I can't find any reason why the NDISulator would cause the RealTek
driver to do the NdisFreeBufferPool() prematurely, and the same driver
obviously works with Windows -- or at least, it doesn't cause a crash:
the Microsoft documentation for NdisFreeBufferPool() says that failing
to return all buffers to the pool before calling  NdisFreeBufferPool()
causes a memory leak.

I've written to my contacts at RealTek asking them to check if this
is indeed a bug in their driver. In the meantime, these new sanity checks
will catch this problem and issue a warning rather than causing a trap.
The trick is to keep a count of outstanding buffers for each buffer pool,
and if the driver tries to call NdisFreeBufferPool() while there are still
buffers outstanding, we mark the pool for deletion and then defer
destroying it until after the last buffer has been reclaimed.
2004-03-04 00:17:14 +00:00
Bill Paul
db2585fd12 Add proper support for DbgPrint(): only print messages if bootverbose
is set, since some drivers with debug info can be very chatty.

Also implement DbgBreakPoint(), which is the Windows equivalent of
Debugger(). Unfortunately, this forces subr_ntoskrnl.c to include
opt_ddb.h.
2004-03-03 17:57:05 +00:00
Peter Wemm
fffaaed41a Regen (FWIW) 2004-02-21 23:38:58 +00:00
Peter Wemm
cdee486c65 Try and make the compat sigreturn prototypes closer to reality. 2004-02-21 23:37:33 +00:00
Peter Wemm
61aeb6a14d Add a note about the landmine in the middle of struct ia32_sigframe. 2004-02-21 23:36:31 +00:00
Peter Wemm
666dfc3f37 DOH!!! Fix signals for freebsd-4.x/i386 binaries. The ucontext has
different alignments due to the sse fxsave dump area.
2004-02-21 23:35:56 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
816d62bbb9 Device megapatch 5/6:
Remove the unused second argument from udev2dev().

Convert all remaining users of makedev() to use udev2dev().  The
semantic difference is that udev2dev() will only locate a pre-existing
dev_t, it will not line makedev() create a new one.

Apart from the tiny well controlled windown in D_PSEUDO drivers,
there should no longer be any "anonymous" dev_t's in the system
now, only dev_t's created with make_dev() and make_dev_alias()
2004-02-21 21:32:15 +00:00
Bruce M Simpson
a1166f2439 Add BSD compatibility tty ioctls LINUX_TIOCSBRK and LINUX_TIOCCBRK. This
addition appears to allow VMware 3 Workstation to operate with nmdm(4)
as a virtual COM device.

Tested by:	Guido van Rooij
2004-02-19 12:38:12 +00:00
Bill Paul
18b59e2d02 Add vector for memmove() (currently aliased to memcpy()) a implement
ExInterlockedAddLargeStatistic().
2004-02-17 21:50:39 +00:00
Bill Paul
eaecffb942 More cleanups/fixes for the AMD Am1771 driver:
- When adding new waiting threads to the waitlist for an object,
  use INSERT_LIST_TAIL() instead of INSERT_LIST_HEAD() so that new
  waiters go at the end of the list instead of the beginning. When we
  wake up a synchronization object, only the first waiter is awakened,
  and this needs to be the first thread that actually waited on the object.

- Correct missing semicolon in INSERT_LIST_TAIL() macro.

- Implement lookaside lists correctly. Note that the Am1771 driver
  uses lookaside lists to manage shared memory (i.e. DMAable) buffers
  by specifying its own alloc and free routines. The Microsoft documentation
  says you should avoid doing this, but apparently this did not deter
  the developers at AMD from doing it anyway.

With these changes (which are the result of two straight days of almost
non-stop debugging), I think I finally have the object/thread handling
semantics implemented correctly. The Am1771 driver no longer crashes
unexpectedly during association or bringing the interface up.
2004-02-16 02:50:03 +00:00
Bill Paul
134164f8d3 Fix a problem with the way we schedule work on the NDIS worker threads.
The Am1771 driver will sometimes do the following:

- Some thread-> NdisScheduleWorkItem(some work)
- Worker thread -> do some work, KeWaitForSingleObject(some event)
- Some other thread -> NdisScheduleWorkItem(some other work)

When the second call to NdisScheduleWorkItem() occurs, the NDIS worker
thread (in our case ndis taskqueue) is suspended in KeWaitForSingleObject()
and waiting for an event to be signaled. This is different from when
the worker thread is idle and waiting on NdisScheduleWorkItem() to
send it more jobs. However, the ndis_sched() function in kern_ndis.c
always calls kthread_resume() when queueing a new job. Normally this
would be ok, but here this causes KeWaitForSingleObject() to return
prematurely, which is not what we want.

To fix this, the NDIS threads created by kern_ndis.c maintain a state
variable to indicate whether they are running (scanning the job list
and executing jobs) or sleeping (blocked on kthread_suspend() in
ndis_runq()), and ndis_sched() will only call kthread_resume() if
the thread is in the sleeping state.

Note that we can't just check to see if the thread is on the run queue:
in both cases, the thread is sleeping, but it's sleeping for different
reasons.

This stops the Am1771 driver from emitting various "NDIS ERROR" messages
and fixes some cases where it crashes.
2004-02-14 20:57:32 +00:00
Bill Paul
c7a61a03e8 Correct instance of *timeout that should have been timeout.
Noticed by: mlaier
2004-02-11 23:11:12 +00:00
Bill Paul
31d5c7fd4d Add yet more bulletproofing. This is to guard against the case that
ndis_init_nic() works one during attach, but fails later. Many things
will blow up if ndis_init_nic() fails and we aren't careful.
2004-02-11 21:53:40 +00:00
Bill Paul
eae7237c29 Add some bulletproofing: don't allow the ndis_get_info() or ndis_set_info()
routines to do anything except return error if the miniport adapter context
is not set (meaning we either having init'ed the driver yet, or the
initialization failed).

Also, be sure to NULL out the adapter context along with the
miniport characteristics pointers if calling the MiniportInitialize()
method fails.
2004-02-10 23:01:53 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
38efe50cbd Remove VFS_STATFS() call which violated the lock order and wasn't
really required anyway.

PR:		kern/61994
Submitted by:	Bjoern Groenvall <bg@sics.se>
2004-02-09 20:33:42 +00:00
Bill Paul
59137ea864 Add stub implementations of KfLowerIrql() and KfRaiseIrql() (both of
which are _fastcall).
2004-02-09 19:13:58 +00:00
Bill Paul
ff853f37b7 Make NdisMMapIoSpace() guard against NULL/uninitialized resource pointers too. 2004-02-08 20:39:35 +00:00
Bill Paul
4dfa77161a Make NdisMMapIoSpace() handle the case where a device has both mem
and altmem ranges mapped.
2004-02-08 20:32:41 +00:00
Bill Paul
e21ffdf2ef Argh. kthread_suspend() when in P_KTHREAD context, tsleep() when not,
not the other way around.
2004-02-07 23:47:10 +00:00
Bill Paul
5a57707840 Correct an intance of mtx_pool_lock() that should have been mtx_pool_unlock(). 2004-02-07 22:19:20 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
36095f4a2b I guess nobody has needed to use the SVR4olator to create device
nodes, or if they did, they're now locked away on the Kurt Gdel
memorial home for the numerically confused:

Don't cast a kernel pointer (from makedev(9)) to an integer (maj+minor combo).
2004-02-07 18:54:34 +00:00
Bill Paul
9ec5585585 Add a whole bunch of new stuff to make the driver for the AMD Am1771/Am1772
802.11b chipset work. This chip is present on the SMC2602W version 3
NIC, which is what was used for testing. This driver creates kernel
threads (12 of them!) for various purposes, and required the following
routines:

PsCreateSystemThread()
PsTerminateSystemThread()
KeInitializeEvent()
KeSetEvent()
KeResetEvent()
KeInitializeMutex()
KeReleaseMutex()
KeWaitForSingleObject()
KeWaitForMultipleObjects()
IoGetDeviceProperty()

and several more. Also, this driver abuses the fact that NDIS events
and timers are actually Windows events and timers, and uses NDIS events
with KeWaitForSingleObject(). The NDIS event routines have been rewritten
to interface with the ntoskrnl module. Many routines with incorrect
prototypes have been cleaned up.

Also, this driver puts jobs on the NDIS taskqueue (via NdisScheduleWorkItem())
which block on events, and this interferes with the operation of
NdisMAllocateSharedMemoryAsync(), which was also being put on the
NDIS taskqueue. To avoid the deadlock, NdisMAllocateSharedMemoryAsync()
is now performed in the NDIS SWI thread instead.

There's still room for some cleanups here, and I really should implement
KeInitializeTimer() and friends.
2004-02-07 06:44:13 +00:00
John Baldwin
28596eb0ea Regen. 2004-02-06 20:21:18 +00:00
John Baldwin
23816cc365 Sync up MP safe flags with global syscalls.master. This includes read(),
write(), close(), getpid(), setuid(), getuid(), svr4_sys_pause(),
svr4_sys_nice(), svr4_sys_kill(), svr4_sys_pgrpsys(), dup(), pipe(),
setgid(), getgid(), svr4_sys_signal(), umask(), getgroups(), setgroups(),
svr4_sys_sigprocmask(), svr4_sys_sigsuspend(), svr4_sys_sigaltstack(),
svr4_sys_sigaction(), svr4_sys_sigpending(), mprotect(), munmap(),
setegid(), seteuid(), setreuid(), setregid().
2004-02-06 20:07:33 +00:00
John Baldwin
0804ed5acc Regen. 2004-02-04 22:00:44 +00:00
John Baldwin
c3b612d935 The following compat syscalls are now mpsafe: linux_getrlimit(),
linux_setrlimit(), linux_old_getrlimit(), osf1_getrlimit(),
osf1_setrlimit(), svr4_sys_ulimit(), svr4_sys_setrlimit(),
svr4_sys_getrlimit(), svr4_sys_setrlimit64(), svr4_sys_getrlimit64(),
ibcs2_sysconf(), and ibcs2_ulimit().
2004-02-04 21:57:00 +00:00
John Baldwin
91d5354a2c Locking for the per-process resource limits structure.
- struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count.  The plimit
  structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy
  on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from
  it without needing a further lock.
- The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading
  limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from
  under you while reading from it.
- Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since
  int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock
  wouldn't buy us anything.
- All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted
  behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return
  either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified
  resource from a process.
- dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of
  other similar syscall helper functions.
- The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit()
  (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit()
  and kern_setrlimit() instead.
- The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls,
  but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead.
- The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits.  It
  also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the
  ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead.  As a result,
  ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant.
- The p_rlimit macro no longer exists.

Submitted by:	mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups)
Tested on:	i386
Compiled on:	alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
Bill Paul
b783c5e972 Correct/improve the implementation of NdisMAllocateSharedMemoryAsync().
Since we have a worker thread now, we can actually do the allocation
asynchronously in that thread's context. Also, we need to return a
status value: if we're unable to queue up the async allocation, we
return NDIS_STATUS_FAILURE, otherwise we return NDIS_STATUS_PENDING
to indicate the allocation has been queued and will occur later.

This replaces the kludge where we just invoked the callback routine
right away in the current context.
2004-02-04 04:44:16 +00:00
Bill Paul
cea179a3fe Implement support for single packet sends. The Intel Centrino driver
that Asus provides on its CDs has both a MiniportSend() routine
and a MiniportSendPackets() function. The Microsoft NDIS docs say
that if a driver has both, only the MiniportSendPackets() routine
will be used. Although I think I implemented the support correctly,
calling the MiniportSend() routine seems to result in no packets going
out on the air, even though no error status is returned. The
MiniportSendPackets() function does work though, so at least in
this case it doesn't matter.

In if_ndis.c:ndis_getstate_80211(), if ndis_get_assoc() returns
an error, don't bother trying to obtain any other state since the
calls may fail, or worse cause the underlying driver to crash.

(The above two changes make the Asus-supplied Centrino work.)

Also, when calling the OID_802_11_CONFIGURATION OID, remember
to initialize the structure lengths correctly.

In subr_ndis.c:ndis_open_file(), set the current working directory
to rootvnode if we're in a thread that doesn't have a current
working directory set.
2004-02-03 07:39:23 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
51305c403f Regen. 2004-02-03 05:20:28 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
12ef052ac2 Sync with kern/syscalls.master. 2004-02-03 05:18:48 +00:00