mark it as timed out. Don't try and free the config
request for read_cfg_header that times out because
it's still active. Put in code for the config reply
handler that will then free up timed out requests.
Fix the FC_PRIMITIVE_SEND completion to not try
and free a command twice. Dunno how this possibly
could have been working for awhile.
MFC after: 2 weeks
out ELS buffers but *don't* hang out commands,
we hang folks on the SAN because the LSI-Logic
f/w apparently sends back BUSY or QFULL or some
darn thing.
If we add command buffers, we have to respond to
them sensibly even if we don't have any upstream
listeners (scsi_targ or scsi_targ_bh), so put in
some local command reponse stuff.
MFC after: 2 weeks
sound cards with optional pseudo-multichannel playback.
It's based on snd_emu10k1 sound driver. Single channel version is available
from audio/emu10kx port since some time.
The two new ALSA header files (GPLed), which contain Audigy 2 ("p16v") and
Audigy 2 Value ("p17v") specific interfaces, are latest versions from ALSA
Mercurial repository.
This is not connected to the build yet.
Submitted by: Yuriy Tsibizov <Yuriy.Tsibizov@gfk.ru>
latest version from Mercurial repository. It brings definition of some
additional Audigy 2 / Audigy 2 Value registers.
- Use new #defines from ALSA emu10k1.h
- Remove unused include files:
+ emu10k1-ac97.h was imported from ALSA and never used,
+ emu10k1.h was imported from Creative Linux emu10k1 driver, but only
AUDIGY_CODEBASE was used from it.
Submitted by: Yuriy Tsibizov <Yuriy.Tsibizov@gfk.ru>
forcing all transfers to do the start read/write stop by hand. Some
smart bridges prefer this sort of operation, and this allows us to
support their features more easily. When bridges don't support it, we
fall back to using the old-style opertaions. Expand the ioctl
interface to expose this function. Unlike the old-style interface,
this interface is thread safe, even on old bridges.
Add MEMORY_BARRIER for the few scratch dma ops that were missing
them plus add a couple of hi 32 bit dma ops (we could probably
allow 64 bit scratch and request/response queue dma now).
install custom pager functions didn't actually happen in practice (they
all just used the simple pager and passed in a local quit pointer). So,
just hardcode the simple pager as the only pager and make it set a global
db_pager_quit flag that db commands can check when the user hits 'q' (or a
suitable variant) at the pager prompt. Also, now that it's easy to do so,
enable paging by default for all ddb commands. Any command that wishes to
honor the quit flag can do so by checking db_pager_quit. Note that the
pager can also be effectively disabled by setting $lines to 0.
Other fixes:
- 'show idt' on i386 and pc98 now actually checks the quit flag and
terminates early.
- 'show intr' now actually checks the quit flag and terminates early.
actually go write the config page. This fixes the long standing
problem about updating NVRAM on Fibre Channel cards and seems
so far to not break SPI config page writes.
Put back role setting into mpt. That is, you can set a desired role
for mpt as a hint. On the next reboot, it'll pick that up and redo
the NVRAM settings appropriately and warn you that this won't take
effect until the next reboot. This saves people the step of having
to find a BIOS utilities disk to set target and/or initiator role
for the MPT cards.
significantly reduces booting time when there is broken floppy disk drive,
controller, cable, BIOS, etc.
When the floppy controller interface is correctly implemented, disk change
signal (DSKCHG) is reflected in the Digital Input Register (DIR) at 0x3f7.
However, there are many cases that the signal is unusable. Moreover, some
BIOS does not reserve the port at all. In those cases, the register may not
function.
loading for the QLogic cards.
Because isp(4) exists before the root is mounted, it's not really
possible for us to use the kernel's linker to load modules directly
from disk- that's really too bad.
However, the this is still a net win in in that the firmware has
been split up on a per chip (and in some cases, functionality)
basis, so the amount of stuff loaded *can* be substantially less
than the 1.5MB of firmware images that ispfw now manages. That is,
each specific f/w set is now also built as a module. For example,
QLogic 2322 f/w is built as isp_2322.ko and Initiator/Target 1080
firmware is built as isp_1080_it.ko.
For compatibility purposes (i.e., to perturb folks the least), we
also still build all of the firmware as one ispfw.ko module.
This allows us to let 'ispfw_LOAD' keep on working in existing
loader.conf files. If you now want to strip this down to just
the firmware for your h/w, you can then change loader.conf to
load the f/w you specifically want.
We also still allow for ispfw to be statically built (e.g., for
PAE and sparc64).
Future changes will look at f/w unloading and also role switching
that then uses the kernel linker to load different ips f/w sets.
MFC after: 2 months
Use it to reset controller and to select data rate. According to Intel
80277AA datasheet, software reset behaves the same as DOR reset except
that it is self clearing. National Semiconductor PC8477B datasheet says
the same. As a side effect, we no longer use Configuration Control
Register (CCR) at 0x3f7 for these controllers, which is often missing
in modern hardware.
(and by extension, the 2422).
One peculiar thing I've found with the 2322 is that if you
don't force it to do Hard LoopID acquisition, the firmware
crashes. This took a while to figure out.
While we're at it, fix various bugs having to do with NVRAM
reading and option setting with respect to pieces of NVRAM.
is never taken since there aren't any 802.11a ural(4) sticks available
on the market.
PR: kern/99676
Submitted by: KIYOHARA Takashi
Reviewed by: damien
MFC after: 1 week
tree... John Baldwin noted that sio might pass values between probe
and attach via softc. It appears that sio does leave the hardware in
a known state after probing, so other drivers that try to probe might
leave it in a worse state. It doesn't seem to pass any data in softc,
however, that I could find... I think we should not be probing for
anything but nonPnP isa, but that's a change for another day.
Submitted by: Frank Behrens
PR: 87845
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
BCM5787 based NICs.
- Recognize BCM5703 B0 ASIC.
- Rewrite the jumbo capability matching macro, so that chips known
to work are listed there. [*]
[*] I'm still not sure about this. Probably more corrections
will be done to this macro after discussion with davidch@
and brad@OpenBSD.
Obtained from: OpenBSD (brad)
This driver was ported from OpenBSD by Shigeaki Tagashira
<shigeaki@se.hiroshima-u.ac.jp> and posted at
http://www.se.hiroshima-u.ac.jp/~shigeaki/software/freebsd-nfe.html
It was additionally cleaned up by me.
It is still a work-in-progress and thus is purposefully not in GENERIC.
And it conflicts with nve(4), so only one should be loaded.
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.
stations in power save: add a new q where mcast frames are stashed
and on beacon update (at DTIM) move frames from the mcast q to the
cabq and start it. This ensures the cabq is only manipulated in
one place.
Sponsored by: Hobnob
MFC after: 2 weeks
Don't enable/disable I/O space except for SAS adapters.
This fixes a problem with VMware 4.5 Workstation.
Fix an egregious bug introduced to target mode so it actually
will not panic when you first enable a lun.
Minor fixes:
Take more infor from port facts and configuration pages.
MFC after: 1 week
- Add a new function linker_release_module() as a more intuitive complement
to linker_reference_module() that wraps linker_file_unload().
linker_release_module() can either take the module name and version info
passed to linker_reference_module() or it can accept the linker file
object returned by linker_reference_module().
- Curitel PC5740 Wireless Modem (Verizon's PCMCIA card)
- Sierra MC5720 Wireless Modem (Built in to Thinkpad X60s)
The scanner in the PR is already supported.
PR: 98908
Submitted by: Michael Collette <metrol@metrol.net>
blinks by default. When the operating system (read: normally an Xbox
360) initializes the gamepad, the LED stops blinking.
Change our uhid code to do the same.
PR: 97169
Submitted by: Ed Schouten <ed@fxq.nl>
- Enable 4 automatic vchan's by default.
- Add some comments which provide ides/questions for improvement.
- Prefix some temporary sysctl's with an underscore to denote that it is not
an official API but a workaround until the real solution is implemented.
yet. More commits to follow.
I got no response from the author, but since the driver is BSD licensed
I don't think he will complain. :-)
I got it from http://people.freebsd.org/~lofi/envy24.tar.gz
Written by: Katsurajima Naoto <raven@katsurajima.seya.yokohama.jp>
- Add more device IDs, ASIC revisions and chip IDs.
- Rewrite a bit code that picks the description for device.
- Introduce several macros to shorten quirks for bugs and
features.[*]
- Use some magic values, that OpenBSD has successfully
possessed from Linux (Broadcom supplied) driver.
- Remove disabled code that tried to access VPD.
[*] The macro that matches Jumbo capable NICs is
rewritten to preserve our current behavior. I
need clarify whether our or theirs is correct.
PR: 68351 (and may be others)
Obtained from: OpenBSD, brad@ mostly
!IFQ_DRV_IS_EMPTY(). Taking this into account, I re-structured the
transmit routine so as to avoid adding another if/then in the
critical path.
Thanks to brueffer for showing my how to test with altq/pf.
- Update the firmware to the latest released firmware
(1.4.3), which corresponds to the firmware in the
latest shipping drivers from Myricom. This firmware
fixes several bugs in the firmware's PCI-e implementation,
and it also changes the driver/firmware interface:
o TSO was added, and changed the format of the transmit
descriptors.
o The firmware no longer counts transmits descriptors,
but frames. So the driver needs to keep a count
of the number of frames sent.
o The weird interrupt strategy changed to a normal receive
return ring. This ring is much bigger, and we may be
able to support DEVICE_POLLING.
o Myricom's header files changed the name of firmware
related #define's and enums (s/_MCP_/FW_).
- Stopped spamming the console with lots of printfs unless
mxge_verbose (or bootverbose) is set.
- Made additional information available via sysctl, including
the results of a PCI-e DMA benchmark run at device reset.
- Decreased the excessively long timeouts when sending commands
from 2 seconds to 20ms.
Sponsored by: Myricom Inc.
the description so we don't have to do any more queries. Disable the
event query code until it figured out since but it is similar to the
AEN detail so we should be able to get that working.
s/myri10ge/mxge/g replacement in the myri10ge files. A few contuation
lines were joined because of the regained columns.
- Hook the mxge driver back to the build.
o Implement a bunch of sysctl's to report the information
that's now always reported. Mvoe reporting of that info
to bootverbose, but maybe it can go away entirely.
dev.ed.X.type: string name
dev.ed.X.TxMem: amount of memory used for tx side of the card
dev.ed.X.RxMem: amount of memory used for rx side of the card
dev.ed.X.Mem: Total amount of mem on card.
o Better comments about where NE-2000 (and clones) gets their MAC
address from.
systems. Introduce a new sysctl "hw.acpi.disable_on_reboot" that allows
users to re-enable the old behavior in case it's needed for some systems.
We never disable in the power-off path.
Original approach submitted by Alexander Logvinov <abuse@akavia.ru> with
reworking by Jung-uk Kim and myself.
firmware_get() will not work while resuming. Note that we can't
simply drop the FIRMWARE_UNLOAD flag, because that will result in
a firmware image that can never be unloaded by the user since the
firmware subsystem will hold a linker reference to it (it's not
clear that firmware_put() without FIRMWARE_UNLOAD ever does quite
what you'd want).
- Removed updates to if_ibytes, if_obytes, if_imcasts, and if_omcasts.
These should not be handled by the driver.
- Add code to handle excessively fragmented mbufs when mapping TX frames.
Reviewed by: ps
Approved by: ps (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
SK-NET GENESIS document says reading SK_ISSR should stop generating
further interrupts(Since we drop a driver lock before invoking
ifp->if_input handler we should disable interrupts in ISR in order
to protect integrity of softc from subsequent interrupts). But it
seems that there is possibility of loosing interrupts between
reading SK_ISSR and determining which interrupts are reported.
To cope with the situation we continuously read SK_ISSR register
until there are no interrupts. However, it seems that the above
work around doesn't fix all cases. To protect watchdog handler
from triggering false alarm add a work around code which try to
reclaim pending Tx descriptors before resetting hardware. This
should fix occasional watchdog timeout errors seen on this driver.
Reported by: Frank Behrens <frank AT pinky dot sax dot de >
Tested by: Frank Behrens <frank AT pinky dot sax dot de >
taskqueued interrupt mode is going to be quite complex. Since
the polling mode is considered legacy feature for em(4) driver,
the decision is made to make polling and new interrupt handler
mutually exclusive, selected at compile time.
If kernel is compiled with DEVICE_POLLING, the fast taskqueued
interrupt handler code is disabled and the em_poll() and legacy
em_intr() functions are enabled. Otherwise, legacy functions
are disabled and only em_intr_fast() code is compiled.
Discussed with: scottl
Clean out the abortive start to homegrown, per-mpt,
Domain Validation. This should really be done at a
higher level.
Use the PIM_SEQSCAN flag for U320- this seems to correct
cases of being unable to consistently negotiate U320 in
the cases where I'd seen this before.
Between this and other recent checkins, this driver is
pretty close to being ready for MFC.
Reviewed by: scottl, ken, scsi@
MFC after: 1 week
set to ILACC rather than PCnet-PCI as VMware doesn't implement ILACC
compatibility, resulting in the VMware virtual machine to crash if
enabled. Add a comment regarding usage of ILACC vs. PCnet-PCI mode.
Reported and tested by: gnn, wsalamon
device went away while open or if you tried to change the config
number while devices were open. Based on the patch from the PR with
a number of changes as discussed with the submitter.
PR: usb/97271
Submitted by: Anish Mistry
axe_cmd() calls. Without this the device can get confused if multiple
threads attempt these operations concurrently. The problem was
easily reproducible by running "ifconfig axe0" in a loop because
eventually it would conflict with axe_tick_task().
A similar approach is probably required in all USB ethernet drivers.
Move the code for printing timer statistics into a test function instead of
an ifdef (accessible via the debug.acpi.hpet_test tunable). Also use defines
for register offsets instead of magic values.
Courtesy of: slow flight to HK
it. We just moved it to be pci specific, so this was causing compile
problems (linking problems, so I didn't notice since I unwisely just
built the module).
vendor-specific device ids across vendors.
- Include the revision in the dc_devs[] array instead of special casing
the revid handling in dc_devtype().
- Use PCI bus accessors to read registers instead of pci_read_config()
where possible.
- Use an 8-bit write to update the latency timer.
- Use PCIR_xxx constants and remove unused DC_xxx related to standard
PCI config registers.
MFC after: 1 week
(1) bpf peer attaches to interface netif0
(2) Packet is received by netif0
(3) ifp->if_bpf pointer is checked and handed off to bpf
(4) bpf peer detaches from netif0 resulting in ifp->if_bpf being
initialized to NULL.
(5) ifp->if_bpf is dereferenced by bpf machinery
(6) Kaboom
This race condition likely explains the various different kernel panics
reported around sending SIGINT to tcpdump or dhclient processes. But really
this race can result in kernel panics anywhere you have frequent bpf attach
and detach operations with high packet per second load.
Summary of changes:
- Remove the bpf interface's "driverp" member
- When we attach bpf interfaces, we now set the ifp->if_bpf member to the
bpf interface structure. Once this is done, ifp->if_bpf should never be
NULL. [1]
- Introduce bpf_peers_present function, an inline operation which will do
a lockless read bpf peer list associated with the interface. It should
be noted that the bpf code will pickup the bpf_interface lock before adding
or removing bpf peers. This should serialize the access to the bpf descriptor
list, removing the race.
- Expose the bpf_if structure in bpf.h so that the bpf_peers_present function
can use it. This also removes the struct bpf_if; hack that was there.
- Adjust all consumers of the raw if_bpf structure to use bpf_peers_present
Now what happens is:
(1) Packet is received by netif0
(2) Check to see if bpf descriptor list is empty
(3) Pickup the bpf interface lock
(4) Hand packet off to process
From the attach/detach side:
(1) Pickup the bpf interface lock
(2) Add/remove from bpf descriptor list
Now that we are storing the bpf interface structure with the ifnet, there is
is no need to walk the bpf interface list to locate the correct bpf interface.
We now simply look up the interface, and initialize the pointer. This has a
nice side effect of changing a bpf interface attach operation from O(N) (where
N is the number of bpf interfaces), to O(1).
[1] From now on, we can no longer check ifp->if_bpf to tell us whether or
not we have any bpf peers that might be interested in receiving packets.
In collaboration with: sam@
MFC after: 1 month
fixing speed negotiation.
Also fix the mpt_execute_req function to actually
match mpt_execute_req_a64. This may explain why
i386 users were having more grief.
can see the results of SPI negotiation w/o being overwhelmed
with other crap).
+ For U320 devices, check against both Settings *and* DV flags before
deciding whether we need to skip actual SPI settings for a device.
+ Go back to creating a 'physical disk' side of a raid/passthru bus that
is limited to the number of maximum physical disks. Actually, this isn't
probably *quite* right yet for one RAID volume, and if we ever end up
with finding a device that supports more than one RAID volume (not likely),
it probably won't quite be right either.
The problem here is that the creating of this 'physical' passthru sim is
just a cheap way to leverage off the CAM midlayer to do our negotiation
for us on the subentities that make up a RAID volume. It almost causes
more trouble than it is worth because we have to remember which side
we're talking to in terms of forming commands and which target ids are
real and so on. Bleah.
+ Skip trying to actually do SPI settings for the RAID volumes on the
real side of the raid/passthru bus pair- this just confuses the issue.
The underlying real physical devices will have the negotiation performed
and the Raid volume will inherit the resultant settings. At the sime time,
non-RAID devices can be on the same real bus, so *do* perform negotiations
with them.
+ At the end of doing all of the settings twiddling, *ahem*, remember to
go update the settings on the card itself (dunno how this got nuked).
At this point, negotiations *seem* to be being done (again) correctly for
both RAID volumes and their subentities. And they seem to be *mostly*
now right for other non-RAID entities on the same bus (I ended up with
3 out of 8 other disks still at narror/async- haven't the slightest
idea why yes).
Finally, negotiations on a normal bus seem to work (again).
There's still more work coming into this area, but we're in the
final stretch.
the passed target id is one of the RAID VolumeID. This result
is used to decide whether to try and do actual SPI negotiations
on the real side of the raid/passthru bus pair. The reason we
check this is that we can have both RAID volumes and real devices
on the same bus.
USBD_FORCE_SHORT_XFER to ensure that we actually build and execute
a transfer. This means that the various alloc_sqtd_chain functions
will always construct a transfer, so it is safe to modify the
allocated descriptors on return. Previously there were cases where
a zero length transfer would cause a NULL dereference.
Reported by: bp
- Reduce the number of RX and TX buffers bfe uses so that it does not use more
bounce buffers than busdma is willing to allow it to use
See if_bfe.c for comments on why this is now safe to do.
Also use BUS_DMA_ALLOCNOW to be on the safe side.
2. Look for the Descriptor Error, and Descriptor Protocol Error flags from
the card, and down the interface if we detect either.
#1 (along with fixes to busdma) makes sure that this card works in all
memory situations. Prior to this change, it was just luck that 512 count
RX/TX lists were properly aligned. Now we can use any size of RX/TX lists
and still have them properly aligned.
#2 ensures that we don't get into an endless interrupt storm if busdma fails
us. Descriptor Protocol Error would occur if we misaligned the TX/RX rings,
and Descriptor Error would occur if we tried to give the card descriptors
or rings with addresses > 1G. Trying to reinitialize the card isn't going
to fix these errors, hence we don't try.
host controllers to avoid the need to allocate any multi-page
physically contiguous memory blocks. This makes it possible to use
USB devices reliably on low-memory systems or when memory is too
fragmented for contiguous allocations to succeed.
The USB subsystem now uses bus_dmamap_load() directly on the buffers
supplied by USB peripheral drivers, so this also avoids having to
copy data back and forth before and after transfers. The ehci and
ohci controllers support scatter/gather as long as the buffer is
contiguous in the virtual address space. For uhci the hardware
cannot handle a physical address discontinuity within a USB packet,
so it is necessary to copy small memory fragments at times.
lost one set to a peninsula power failure last night. After
this, I can see both submembers and the raid volumes again,
but speed negotiation is still broken.
Add a mpt_raid_free_mem function to centralize the resource
reclaim and fixed a small memory leak.
Remove restriction on number of targets for systems with IM enabled-
you can have setups that have both IM volumes as well as other devices.
Fix target id selection for passthru and nonpastrhu cases.
Move complete command dumpt to MPT_PRT_DEBUG1 level so that just
setting debug level gets mostly informative albeit less verbose
dumping.
but large parts are rewritten by matk and tanimura.
This is old code, it's not maintained since 2003. We also don't have a
maintainer for this! Yuriy Tsibizov took it and uses it in his emu10kx
driver. Since the emu10kx driver will enter the tree "soon" (some bugs
have to be fixed after Yuriy return from his holidays), I add it here
already.
This also contains some changes to emu10k1 and cmi, so if you're lucky,
you can now make some kind of use of midi with those soundcards.
To all those poor souls which don't have such a card: feel free to send
patches, we don't have a maintainer for this.
To those which miss a specific feature in the midi code: feel free to
submit patches, we don't have a maintainer for this.
Oh, did I already told that it would be nice if someone would take care
of it? Maintainer with midi equipment wanted! :-)
If you get LOR's, submit a PR and notify multimedia@ please. If you get
panics, submit a PR with a backtrace (compile the sound system into your
kernel instead of using modules in this case) and notify multimedia@
please.
Written by: matk, tanimura
Submitted by: "Yuriy Tsibizov" <Yuriy.Tsibizov@gfk.ru>
Based upon: code from NetBSD
but large parts are rewritten by matk and tanimura.
This is old code, it's not maintained since 2003. We also don't have a
maintainer for this! Yuriy Tsibizov took it and uses it in his emu10kx
driver. Since the emu10kx driver will enter the tree "soon" (some bugs
have to be fixed after Yuriy return from his holidays), I add it here
already.
This also contains some changes to emu10k1 and cmi, so if you're lucky,
you can now make some kind of use of midi with those soundcards.
To all those poor souls which don't have such a card: feel free to send
patches, we don't have a maintainer for this.
To those which miss a specific feature in the midi code: feel free to
submit patches, we don't have a maintainer for this.
Oh, did I already told that it would be nice if someone would take care
of it? Maintainer with midi equipment wanted! :-)
If you get LOR's, submit a PR and notify multimedia@ please. If you get
panics, submit a PR with a backtrace (compile the sound system into your
kernel instead of using modules in this case) and notify multimedia@
please.
Written by: matk, tanimura
Submitted by: "Yuriy Tsibizov" <Yuriy.Tsibizov@gfk.ru>
Based upon: code from NetBSD
This used to make syscons switch to vty0 when we entered DDB but this
was lost in the KDB shuffle. We may want to bring it back down the road
but it should be done by calling cn_init_t/cn_term_t instead, possibly
with a flag argument saying "Debugger!"
other timeouts could not happen while suspending, including timeouts
for things like msleep. This caused the system to hang on suspend
when the cbb was enabled, since its suspend path powered down the
socket which used a timeout to wait for it to be done.
APM now creates a thread when it is enabled, and deletes the thread
when it is disabled. This thread takes the place of the timeout by
doing its polling every ~.9s. When the thread is disabled, it will
wakeup early, otherwise it times out and polls the varius things the
old timeout polled (APM events, suspend delays, etc).
This makes my Sony VAIO 505TS suspend/resume correctly when APM is
enabled (ACPI is black listed on my 505TS).
This will likely fix other problems with the suspend path where
drivers would sleep with msleep and/or do other timeouts. Maybe
there's some special case code that would use DELAY while suspending
and msleep otherwise that can be revisited and removed.
This was also tested by glebius@, who pointed out that in the patch I
sent him, I'd forgotten apm_saver.c
MFC After: 3 weeks
was done, I believe, to work around some cards having issues in the
suspend case. I think that this helped my Sony VAIO TS505 work better
when it had certain wireless cards in it and I did a apm -z. I've not
tested suspend/resume on other laptops in a long time, so I hope this
doesn't cause greif. Please let me know if it does.
of cases where we didn't take out the lock before setting or clearing
a bit. This apparently can lead to a race at kldunload time (at least
on my Turion64 laptop, never saw it on my Sony Vaio).
EHCI spec for linking in new qTDs into an asynchronous QH. This
requires that there is a qTD marked as not active and not halted
at the start of the QH's list, and the hardware will know to re-fetch
the qTD on each pass rather than just looking at the overlay qTD:
"The host controller must be able to advance the queue from the
Fetch QH state in order to avoid all hardware/software race
conditions. This simple mechanism allows software to simply link
qTDs to the queue head and activate them, then the host controller
will always find them if/when they are reachable."
This is achieved by keeping an "inactivesqtd" entry on the QH list,
and re-using it each time as the start of the next transfer, and
allocating a new qTD to become the next inactivesqtd. Then a new
transfer can be activated by just setting its "active" flag, which
avoids all the previous messing with overlay qTD state in
ehci_set_qh_qtd().
before starting exploring (4 seconds), and extend the wait period
if new USB buses are attached while waiting.
This works around a problem seen when there is more than one EHCI
controller in the system and you kldload usb.ko after the system
has booted. The problem is that usb.ko contains 3 separate PCI
drivers which get initialised one by one (uhci, ohci, ehci), and
when each driver is initialised, all PCI buses are re-probed after
just the addition of that driver. This means that there can be a
significant delay between the attaching of a companion controller
and the subsequent EHCI attach, so it is possible for the companion
controller's USB 1.x bus to be scanned before the EHCI driver gets
a chance to check if there is really a USB 2.x device connected.
- Rename REG_DL to REG_DLL and REG_DLH.
- Always treat DLL and DLH as two separate 8-bit registers instead of one
16-bit register.
Additionally, remove the probe for the high 4 bits of IER being 0 and don't
assume we can always read/write 0 to/from those bits.
These changes allow uart(4) to drive the UARTs on the Intel XScale PXA255.
Reviewed by: marcel
- Skip PnP devices as some wedge when trying to probe them as C-NET(98)S.
This fix makes le(4) actually work with the C-NET(98)S.
Reviewed by: marius
Tested by: Watanabe Kazuhiro < CQG00620 at nifty dot ne dot jp >
Be cognizant as to whether we're running 2KLogin f/w in target mode and
do the appropriate loopid load based upon that.
Do a first cut (seems to work, at least for amd64) at 64 bit target
mode for fibre channel cards. We could probably also do it for SPI
cards, but that's not supported right now.
- Linux ioctl support, with the other Linux changes MegaCli
will run if you mount linprocfs & linsysfs then set
sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.12 or similar. This works
on i386. It should work on amd64 but not well tested yet.
StoreLib may or may not work. Remember to kldload mfi_linux.
- Add in AEN (Async Event Notification) support so we can
get messages from the firmware when something happens.
Not all messages are in defined in event detail. Use
event_log to try to figure out what happened.
- Try to implement something like SIGIO for StoreLib. Since
mrmonitor doesn't work right I can't fully test it. StoreLib
works best with the rh9 base. In theory mrmonitor isn't
needed due to native driver support of AEN :-)
Now we can configure and monitor the RAID better.
Submitted by: IronPort Systems.
full, kick the binary blob to force it to complete any pending tx
completions.
- In the watchdog routine, only reset the chip if the blob doesn't complete
any pending tx completions rather than requiring it to complete all of
the pending tx completions.
Submitted by: Nathan Whitehorn <nathanw@uchicago.edu>
MFC after: 2 weeks
lnc(4) on PC98 and i386. The ISA front-end supports the same non-PNP
network cards as lnc(4) did and additionally a couple of PNP ones.
Like lnc(4), the C-bus front-end of le(4) only supports C-NET(98)S
and is untested due to lack of such hardware, but given that's it's
based on the respective lnc(4) and not too different from the ISA
front-end it should be highly likely to work.
- Remove the descriptions of le(4), which where converted from lnc(4),
from sys/i386/conf/NOTES and sys/pc98/conf/NOTES as there's a common
one in sys/conf/NOTES.
still should return BUS_PROBE_LOW_PRIORITY instead of BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT
in order to give pcn(4) a chance to attach in case it probes after le(4).
- Rearrange the code related to RX interrupt handling so that ownership of
RX descriptors is immediately returned to the NIC after we have copied
the data of the hardware, allowing the NIC to already reuse the descriptor
while we are processing the data in ifp->if_input(). This results in a
small but measurable increase in RX throughput.
As a side-effect, this moves the workaround for the LANCE revision C bug
to am7900.c (still off by default as I doubt we will actually encounter
such an old chip in a machine running FreeBSD) and the workaround for the
bug in the VMware PCnet-PCI emulation to am79000.c, which is now also
only compiled on i386 (resulting in a small increase in RX throughput on
the other platforms).
- Change the RX interrupt handlers so that the descriptor error bits are
only check once in case there was no error instead of twice (inspired
by the NetBSD pcn(4), which additionally predicts the error branch as
false).
- Fix the debugging output of the RX and TX interrupt handlers; while
looping through the descriptors print info about the currently processed
one instead of always the previously last used one; remove pointless
printing of info about the RX descriptor bits after their values were
reset.
- Create the DMA tags used to allocate the memory for the init block,
descriptors and packet buffers with the alignment the respective NIC
actually requires rather than using PAGE_SIZE unconditionally. This might
as well fix the alignment of the memory as it seems we do not inherit
the alignment constraint from the parent DMA tag.
- For the PCI variants double the number of RX descriptors and buffers
from 8 to 16 as this minimizes the number of RX overflows im seeing with
one NIC-mainboard combination. Nevertheless move reporting of overflows
under debugging as they seem unavoidable with some crappy hardware.
- Set the software style of the PCI variants to ILACC rather than PCnet-PCI
as the former is was am79000.c actually implements. Should not make a
difference for this driver though.
- Fix the driver name part in the MODULE_DEPEND of the PCI front-end for
ether.
- Use different device descriptions for PCnet-Home and PCnet-PCI.
- Fix some 0/NULL confusion in lance_get().
- Use bus_addr_t for sc_addr and bus_size_t for sc_memsize as these are
more appropriate than u_long for these.
- Remove the unused LE_DRIVER_NAME macro.
- Add a comment describing why we are taking the LE_HTOLE* etc approach
instead of using byteorder(9) functions directly.
- Improve some comments and fix some wording.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Current code does not report link loss correctly - when link goes down,
mii_phy_tick() will notice that with up to mii_anegticks delay.
If link goes up during this delay then link flapping will be unnoticed
by driver.
2) mii_phy_add_media(): initialize sc->mii_anegticks for 10/100 media
3) Use MII_ANEGTICKS/MII_ANEGTICKS_GIGE defines instead of hardcoded values.
Approved by: glebius (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
divisor. This allows us to set the line speed to the maximum
of 1/4 of the device clock.
o Disable the baudrate generator before programming the line
settings, including baudrate, and enable it afterwards.
was not checked at all. There is only one case when sc_clean_up()
can fail, because of wait_scrn_saver_stop(), but it doesn't hurt
to check anyway.
Reviewed by: rodrigc
Found by: Coverity Prevent
If the embedded controller exists before the sysresource devices, for
example, it will be attached first. Instead, let the normal device
order function work as we first desired. [1]
There still remained a problem where we couldn't allocate resources in
acpi0 that were passed up by the sysresource pseudo-devices. These
devices had to probe/attach first to give their resources to acpi, then
acpi would allocate them before probing/attaching other devices. To
work around this, we attach them from acpi_sysres_alloc(). A better
approach would be to implement multi-pass probe/attach in newbus but
that's a much bigger task.
Suggested by: jhb [1]
Hardware from: Centaur Technologies
MFC after: 1 week