longer uses the active and inactive paging queues. Instead, the pmap now
maintains an LRU-ordered list of pv entry pages, and pmap_pv_reclaim() uses
this list to select pv entries for reclamation.
Note: The old pmap_collect() tried to avoid reclaiming mappings for pages
that have either a hold_count or a busy field that is non-zero. However,
this isn't necessary for correctness, and the locking in pmap_collect() was
insufficient to guarantee that such mappings weren't reclaimed. The new
pmap_pv_reclaim() doesn't even try.
Tested by: sbruno
MFC after: 5 weeks
via `camcontrol tags ... -N ...`. There is no need to tune it in
usual cases, but some users want to have it for debugging purposes.
MFC after: 2 weeks
DEVICE_RESUME() should be done before AcpiLeaveSleepState() because
PCI config space evaluation can be occurred during control method
executions.
This should fix one of the hang up problems on resuming.
MFC after: 3 days
compiled into the kernel. This allows us to boot the same kernel on
machines with different master clock frequencies, so long as we can
determine the main clock frequency accurately. Cleanup the pmc clock
init function so it can be called in early boot so we can use the
serial port just after we call cninit.
# We have two calls to at91_pmc_clock_init for reasons unknown, that will
# be fixed later -- it is harmless for now.
to this pmap.c. This new r/w lock is used primarily to synchronize access
to the TTE lists. However, it will be used in a somewhat unconventional
way. As finer-grained TTE list locking is added to each of the pmap
functions that acquire this r/w lock, its acquisition will be changed from
write to read, enabling concurrent execution of the pmap functions with
finer-grained locking.
Reviewed by: attilio
Tested by: flo
MFC after: 10 days
DataFlash.
- Add a mapping for the Nut/OS configuration DataFlash partition according
to the board manual (but not known to either Linux or U-Boot (patches).
since batch_len is unused by Linux driver, it seems that it is sometimes
gets passed wrong. This causes command buffer corruption and GPU hung.
Old GEMified DDX drivers that needs this workaround are not supported.
MFC after: 1 month
Currently, 'ifconfig laggX down' does not remove members from this
lagg(4) interface. So, 'service netif stop laggX' followed by
'service netif start laggX' will choke, because "stop" will leave
interfaces attached to the laggX and ifconfig from the "start" will
refuse to add already-existing interfaces.
The real-world case is when I am bundling together my Ethernet and
WiFi interfaces and using multiple profiles for accessing network in
different places: system being booted up with one profile, but later
this profile being exchanged to another one, followed by 'service
netif restart' will not add WiFi interface back to the lagg: the
"stop" action from 'service netif restart' will shut down my main WiFi
interface, so wlan0 that exists in the lagg0 will be destroyed and
purged from lagg0; the "start" action will try to re-add both
interfaces, but since Ethernet one is already in lagg0, ifconfig will
refuse to add the wlan0 from WiFi interface.
Since adding the interface to the lagg(4) when it is already here
should be an idempotent action: we're really not changing anything,
so this fix doesn't change the semantics of interface addition.
Approved by: thompsa
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
headers for TSO but also for generic checksum offloading. Ideally we
would only have one common function shared amongst all drivers, and
perhaps when updating them for IPv6 we should introduce that.
Eventually we should provide the meta information along with mbufs to
avoid (re-)parsing entirely.
To not break IPv6 (checksums and offload) and to be able to MFC the
changes without risking to hurt 3rd party drivers, duplicate the v4
framework, as other OSes have done as well.
Introduce interface capability flags for TX/RX checksum offload with
IPv6, to allow independent toggling (where possible). Add CSUM_*_IPV6
flags for UDP/TCP over IPv6, and reserve further for SCTP, and IPv6
fragmentation. Define CSUM_DELAY_DATA_IPV6 as we do for legacy IP and
add an alias for CSUM_DATA_VALID_IPV6.
This pretty much brings IPv6 handling in line with IPv4.
TSO is still handled in a different way and not via if_hwassist.
Update ifconfig to allow (un)setting of the new capability flags.
Update loopback to announce the new capabilities and if_hwassist flags.
Individual driver updates will have to follow, as will SCTP.
Reported by: gallatin, dim, ..
Reviewed by: gallatin (glanced at?)
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC with: r235961,235959,235958
to this pmap.c. This new r/w lock is used primarily to synchronize access
to the PV lists. However, it will be used in a somewhat unconventional
way. As finer-grained PV list locking is added to each of the pmap
functions that acquire this r/w lock, its acquisition will be changed from
write to read, enabling concurrent execution of the pmap functions with
finer-grained locking.
X-MFC after: r236045
There are currently no in-tree consumers; I'm adding it now for use by
vendor code. This matches the change OpenBSD made while implementing
MPLS in gif(4).
- Fix some math errors in mmc_decode_csd_sd().
- Fix incorrect arguments to mmc_send_app_op_cond() in mmc_go_discovery().
- Add reporting of CSD for debug purposes.
- Add detection (and skipping) of password-locked cards.
- Add setting of block length on card if necessary.
Submitted by: Patrick Kelsey
MFC after: 3 days
1948 zpool list should show more detailed pool information
Display per-vdev information with "zpool list -v".
The added expandsize property has currently no value on FreeBSD.
This changeset allows adding expansion support to individual vdevs
in the future.
References:
https://www.illumos.org/issues/1948
Obtained from: illumos (issue #1948)
MFC after: 2 weeks
implementation specific vs. the common architecture definition.
Bring PPC4XX defines (PSL, SPR, TLB). Note the new definitions under
BOOKE_PPC4XX are not used in the code yet.
This change set is not supposed to affect existing E500 support, it's just
another reorg step before bringing support for E500mc, E5500 and PPC465.
Obtained from: AppliedMicro, Freescale, Semihalf
are handled in most CAM peripheral drivers that are not handled by
GEOM's disk class.
The usual character driver open and close semantics are that the
driver gets N open calls, but only one close, when the last caller
closes the device.
CAM peripheral drivers expect that behavior to be honored to the
letter, and the CAM peripheral driver code (specifically
cam_periph_release_locked_busses()) panics if it is done incorrectly.
Since devfs has to drop its locks while it calls a driver's close
routine, and it does not have a way to delay or prevent open calls
while it is calling the close routine, there is a race.
The sequence of events, simplified a bit, is:
- devfs acquires a lock
- devfs checks the reference count, and if it is 1, continues to close.
- devfs releases the lock
- 2nd process open call on the device happens here
- devfs calls the driver's close routine
- devfs acquires a lock
- devfs decrements the reference count
- devfs releases the lock
- 2nd process close call on the device happens here
At the second close, we get a panic in
cam_periph_release_locked_busses(), complaining that peripheral
has been released when the reference count is already 0. This is
because we have gotten two closes in a row, which should not
happen.
The fix is to add the D_TRACKCLOSE flag to the driver's cdevsw, so
that we get a close() call for each open(). That does happen
reliably, so we can make sure that our reference counts are
correct.
Note that the sa(4) and pt(4) drivers only allow one context
through the open routine. So these drivers aren't exposed to the
same race condition.
scsi_ch.c,
scsi_enc.c,
scsi_enc_internal.h,
scsi_pass.c,
scsi_sg.c:
For these drivers, change the open() routine to
increment the reference count for every open, and
just decrement the reference count in the close.
Call cam_periph_release_locked() in some scenarios
to avoid additional lock and unlock calls.
scsi_pt.c: Call cam_periph_release_locked() in some scenarios
to avoid additional lock and unlock calls.
MFC after: 3 days
already plan to support >64k payload here, the IPv6 header payload
length obviously is only 16 bit and the calculations need to be right.
Reported by: dim
Tested by: dim
MFC after: 1 day
X-MFC: with r235958
than required for handling MAXPHYS and report the resulting maximum
I/O size to CAM instead of implicitly limiting it to DFLTPHYS.
- Move the variables of sym_action2() out of nested scope as required
by style(9) and remove extraneous curly braces.
- Replace a magic value for PCIR_COMMAND with the appropriate macro.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
Tested with a HBA donated by wilko.
MFC after: 3 days
longer uses the active and inactive paging queues. Instead, the pmap now
maintains an LRU-ordered list of pv entry pages, and pmap_pv_reclaim() uses
this list to select pv entries for reclamation.
Note: The old pmap_collect() tried to avoid reclaiming mappings for pages
that have either a hold_count or a busy field that is non-zero. However,
this isn't necessary for correctness, and the locking in pmap_collect() was
insufficient to guarantee that such mappings weren't reclaimed. The new
pmap_pv_reclaim() doesn't even try.
MFC after: 5 weeks
These aren't strictly needed at the moment as we're not doing APSM
and forcing the NIC in and out of network sleep. But, they don't hurt.
Tested:
* AR9280 (mini-PCIe)
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros, Linux ath9k
* Now that ah_configPCIE is called for both power on and suspend/resume,
make sure the right bit(s) are cleared and set when suspending and
resuming. Specifically:
+ force disable/enable the PCIe PHY upon suspend/resume;
+ reprogram the PCIe WAR register when resuming and upon power-on.
* Add a recipe which powers down any PCIe PHY hardware inside the AR5416
(which is the PCI variant) to save on power. I have (currently) no way
to test exactly how much power is saved, if any.
Tested on:
* AR5416 cardbus - although unfortunately pccard/cbb/cardbus currently
detaches the NIC upon suspend, I don't think it's a proper test case.
* AR5418 PCIe attached to expresscard - since we're not doing PCIe APSM,
it's also not likely a full/good test case.
In both instances I went through a handful of suspend/resume cycles and
ensured that the STA vap reassociated correctly.
TODO:
* Setup a laptop to simply sit in a suspend/resume loop, making sure that
the NIC always correctly comes back;
* Start doing suspend/resume tests with actual traffic going on in the
background, as I bet this process is all quite racy at the present;
* Test adhoc/hostap mode, just to be completely sure it's working correctly;
* See if I can jury rig an external power source to an AR5416 to test out
whether ah_disablePCIE() works.
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros
* Add some other WAR bits (very usefully described too) in preparation for
porting over some suspend/resume fixes from ath9k/Atheros.
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros
Use M_ZERO with malloc rather than calling bzero() ourselves.
Change if () panic() checks to KASSERT()s as they are only
catching invariants in code flow but not dependent on network
input/output.
Move initial assigments indirecting pointers after the lock
has been aquired.
Passing layer boundries, reset M_PROTOFLAGS.
Remove a NULL assignment before free.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Properly protect the inp read access when handling the control code.
In the past this was expensive but given the rlock it's not so much
anymore.
Spotted while: optimizing udp6
Discussed with: rwatson (a few months ago)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
PMP ports such as PMP configuration or SEMB should be exposed or hidden.
These ports were always hidden before as useless and sometimes promatic.
But with updated ses driver supporting SEMB it is no longer so straight.
Keep ports hidden by default to avoid probe request ttimeouts if SEP is
not connected to PMP's SEMB via I2C, that is very often situation.
queue the packet for LRO and tell the driver to directly pass it on.
This avoids re-assembly and later re-fragmentation problems when
forwarding.
It's not the best solution but the simplest and most effective for
the moment.
Should have been done: ages ago
Discussed with and by: many
MFC after: 3 days
process exit. Instead use CAM's standard reference counting to prevent
periph going away until process won't complete. I think that sleep in
single CAM SWI thread is not a good idea and may lead to deadlocks if
daemon process waits for some command completion. Combined with recent
patch avoiding use of CAM SWI for ATA it just causes panics because of
sleeps prohibited in interrupt thread context.
This combination doesn't make sense, unit numbers should be hardwired
only in context of a known driver. The wildcard devices should have
wildcard unit numbers.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
not to disable the PCIe PHY in prepration for reset.
Extend the enablepci method to have a "poweroff" flag, which if equal
to true means the hardware is about to go to sleep.
Add TSO6 and LRO/IPv6 support.
Fix the module Makefile to at least properly inlcude opt_inet6.h
and allow builds without INET or INET6.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Allow LRO to work on IPv6 as well.
Fix the module Makefile to at least properly inlcude opt_inet6.h
and allow builds without INET or INET6.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Factor out Hop-By-Hop option processing. It's still not heavily used,
it reduces the footprint of ip6_input() and makes ip6_input() more
readable.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Add code to handle pre-checked TCP checksums as indicated by mbuf
flags to save the entire computation for validation if not needed.
In the IPv6 TCP output path only compute the pseudo-header checksum,
set the checksum offset in the mbuf field along the appropriate flag
as done in IPv4.
In tcp_respond() just initialize the IPv6 payload length to 0 as
ip6_output() will properly set it.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Simple yet effective change enabling checksum "offload" on loopback
for IPv6 to avoid expensive computations.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Defer checksum calulations on UDP6 output and respect the mbuf
flags set by NICs having done checksum validation for us already,
thus saving the computing time in the input path as well.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Add support for delayed checksum calculations in the IPv6
output path. We currently cannot offload to the card if we
add extension headers (which incl. fragmentation).
Fix two SCTP offload support copy&paste bugs: calculate
checksums if fragmenting and no need to flag IPv4 header
checksums in the IPv6 forwarding path.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
* Flesh out the pcie disable method for 11n chips, as they were defaulting
to the AR5212 (empty) PCIe disable method.
* Add accessor macros for the HAL PCIe enable/disable calls.
* Call disable on ath_suspend()
* Call enable on ath_resume()
NOTE:
* This has nothing to do with the NIC sleep/run state - the NIC still
will stay in network-run state rather than supporting network-sleep
state. This is preparation work for supporting correct suspend/resume
WARs for the 11n PCIe NICs.
TODO:
* It may be feasible at this point to keep the chip powered down during
initial probe/attach and only power it up upon the first configure/reset
pass. This however would require correct (for values of "correct")
tracking of the NIC power configuration state from the driver and that
just isn't attempted at the moment.
Tested:
* AR9280 on my Lenovo T60, but with no suspend/resume pass (yet).
Hide the ip6aux functions. The only one referenced outside ip6_input.c
is not compiled in yet (__notyet__) in route6.c (r235954). We do have
accessor functions that should be used.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
X-MFC: KPI?
Simplify the code removing a return from an earlier else case,
not differing from the default function return called now.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
We currently nowhere set IP6A_SWAP making the entire check useless
with the current code. Keep around but do not compile in.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
No need to hold the (expensive) rt lock over (expensive) logging.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Factor out the tcp_hc_getmtu() call. As the comments say it
applies to both v4 and v6, so only write it once making it easier
to read the protocol family specifc code.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Significantly update tcp_lro for mostly two things:
1) introduce basic support for IPv6 without extension headers.
2) try hard to also get the incremental checksum updates right,
especially also in the IPv4 case for the IP and TCP header.
Move variables around for better locality, factor things out into
functions, allow checksum updates to be compiled out, ...
Leave a few comments on further things to look at in the future,
though that is not the full list.
Update drivers with appropriate #includes as needed for IPv6 data
type in LRO.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
in_cksum.h required ip.h to be included for struct ip. To be
able to use some general checksum functions like in_addword()
in a non-IPv4 context, limit the (also exported to user space)
IPv4 specific functions to the times, when the ip.h header is
present and IPVERSION is defined (to 4).
We should consider more general checksum (updating) functions
to also allow easier incremental checksum updates in the L3/4
stack and firewalls, as well as ponder further requirements by
certain NIC drivers needing slightly different pseudo values
in offloading cases. Thinking in terms of a better "library".
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
1. Define all registers. These definitions are needed to support
the FCM driver for direct-connect NAND.
2. Repurpose lbc_read_reg() and lbc_write_reg() for use by localbus
attached device drivers. Use bus_space functions directly in the
lbc driver itself.
3. Be smarter about programming LAWs and mapping memory. The ranges
defined in the FDT are per bank (= chip select) and since we can
have up to 8 banks, we could easily use more than 8 LAWs or TLB
enrties when per-bank memory ranges need multiple LAWs or TLBs
due to alignment or size constraints.
We now combine all memory ranges into the fewest possible set of
contiguous regions and program the hardware for that. Thus, a
cleverly written FDT with 8 devices may still only need 1 LAW or
1 TLB entry. Note that the memory ranges can be assigned randomly
to the banks. We sort as we build to handle that.
4. Support the FCM when programming the OR register. This is mostly
for documention purposes as we do not have a way to define the
mode for a bank.
5. Remove Semihalf-ism: do not define DEBUG (only to undefine it
again).
FDT does not define all ranges possible for a particular node (e.g.
PCI).
While here, only update the trgt_mem and trgt_io pointers if there's
no error. This avoids that we knowingly write an invalid target (= -1).
for variables that live in the boot page.
o Add bp_trace (yes, it's in the boot page) that gets zeroed before we
try to wake a core and to which the core being woken can write markers
so that we know where the core was in case it doesn't wake up. The
boot code does not yet write markers (too follow).
o Disable the boot page translation to allow the last 4K page to be used
for whatever we please. It would get mapped otherwise.
o Fix kernstart in the case of SMP. The start argument is typically page
aligned due to the alignment requirements that come with having a boot
page. The point of using trunc_page is that we get the actual load
address given that the entry point is immediately following the ELF
headers. In the SMP case this ended up exactly 4K after the load
address. Hence subtracting 1 from start.
exceptions early enough during boot that the kernel will do ithe same.
Use lwsync only when compiling for LP64 and revert to the more proven isync
when compiling for ILP32. Note that in the end (i.e. between revision 222198
and this change) ILP32 changed from using sync to using isync. As per Nathan
the isync is needed to make sure I/O accesses are properly serialized with
locks and isync tends to be more effecient than sync.
While here, undefine __ATOMIC_ACQ and __ATOMIC_REL at the end of the file
so as not to leak their definitions.
Discussed with: nwhitehorn
Introduce a (for now copied stripped down) in6_cksum_pseudo()
function. We should be able to use this from in6_cksum() but
we should also ponder possible MD specific improvements.
It takes an extra csum argument to allow for easy checks as
will be done by the upper layer protocol input paths.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Optimize in6_cksum(), re-ordering work and limiting variable
initialization, removing a bzero() for mostly re-initialized
struct values, making use of the newly introduced in6_getscope(),
as well as converting an if/panic to a KASSERT().
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
Without it, it fails to create labels for filesystems resized by
growfs(8).
PR: kern/165962
Submitted by: Olivier Cochard-Labbe <olivier at cochard dot me>
Introduce in6_getscope() to allow more effective checksum
computations without the need to copy the address to clear the
scope.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
With the changes over the past year to how accesses to the page's dirty
field are synchronized, there is no need for pmap_protect() to acquire
the page queues lock unless it is going to access the pv lists or
PMAP1/PADDR1.
Style fix to pmap_protect().
Revamp the CAM enclosure services driver.
This updated driver uses an in-kernel daemon to track state changes and
publishes physical path location information\for disk elements into the
CAM device database.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Submitted by: gibbs, will, mav
- Add low-level support for SATA Enclosure Management Bridge (SEMB)
devices -- SATA equivalents of the SCSI SES/SAF-TE devices.
- Add some utility functions for SCSI SAF-TE devices access.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
low memory situation. I've observed a situation where per-CPU
allocations were disabled while there were enough free cached pages.
Basically, cnt.v_free_count was sitting stable at a value lower
than cnt.v_free_min and that caused massive performance drop.
Reviewed by: alc
MFC after: 1 week
processor objects. Instead of forcing the new-bus CPU objects to use
a unit number equal to pc_cpuid, adjust acpi_pcpu_get_id() to honor the
MADT IDs by default. As with the previous change, setting
debug.acpi.cpu_unordered to 1 in the loader will revert to the old
behavior.
Tested by: jimharris
MFC after: 1 month
and deactivating PCI resources. Previously, if a device had more than
48 MSI interrupts, then activating message 48 (which has a rid == PCIR_BIOS)
would incorrectly try to enable the PCI ROM BAR.
Tested by: Olivier Cinquin ocinquin uci edu
MFC after: 3 days
negotiate with each other on the TLP payload size so blindly
forcing the size to 128 can cause a completion error which in turn
will stop device.
Reported by: Geans Pin < geanspin <> broadcom dot com >
MFC after: 5 days
configured down. Formerly, IPMI communication was lost whenever the
interface was not up. The reason was that the BCE_EMAC_MODE
register was not configured with the correct media settings. There
are two parts to the fix.
First, resetting the chip in bce_reset() causes the BCE_EMAC_MODE
register to be initialized to a default value that does not
necessarily correspond to the actual media settings. The fix
implemented here is a bit of a hack. Ideally, at the end of
bce_reset() we would poll the PHY to determine the negotiated media,
and then we would set the BCE_EMAC_MODE register accordingly. That
is difficult, since the PHY is abstracted behind the MII layer and is
not supposed to be queried directly from the MAC driver. Instead,
we read the BCE_EMAC_MODE register at the beginning of bce_reset()
and then restore its media bits to their original values before
returning. If IPMI is up and running, then the link is already
established and the BCE_EMAC_MODE register is already set appropriately
when bce_reset() is called. If IPMI is not running, no harm is
done by preserving the BCE_EMAC_MODE settings. The driver will set
the register properly once the interface is configured up and link
is established.
Second, bce_miibus_statchg() is sometimes called when the link is
down. In that case, the reported media settings are invalid.
Formerly, the driver used them anyway to setup the BCE_EMAC_MODE
register. We now avoid changing any MAC registers unless link is
active and the reported media settings are valid.
Submitted by: jdp
Tested by: jdp
MFC after: 5 days
I'll have to leave this high for now, until I've done some significant
surgery with how ath_bufs (and descriptors) are handled.
This should significantly cut down on the opportunities for a full TX
queue hanging traffic. I'll continue making things work though; I'm
mostly doing this for users. :)
* If the first call succeeded but failed to transmit, a timer would
reschedule it via bar_timeout(). Unfortunately bar_timeout() didn't
check the return value from the ieee80211_send_bar() reattempt and
if that failed (eg the driver ic_raw_xmit() failed), it would never
re-arm the timer.
* If BARPEND is cleared (which ieee80211_send_bar() will do if it can't
TX), then re-arming the timer isn't enough - once bar_timeout() occurs,
it'll see BARPEND is 0 and not run through the rest of the routine.
So when rearming the timer, also set that flag.
* If the TX wasn't occuring, bar_tx_complete() wouldn't be called and the
driver callback wouldn't be called either. So the driver had no idea
that the BAR TX attempt had failed. In the ath(4) case, TX would stay
paused.
(There's no callback to indicate that BAR TX had failed or not;
only a "BAR TX was attempted". That's a separate, later problem.)
So call the driver callback (ic_bar_response()) before the ADDBA session
is torn down, so it has a chance of being notified that things didn't
quite go to plan.
I've verified that yes, this does suspend traffic for ath(4), retry BAR
TX even if the driver is failing ic_raw_xmit(), and then eventually giving
up and sending a DELBA. I'll address the "out of ath_buf" issue in ath(4)
in a subsequent commit - this commit just fixes the edge case where any
driver is (way) out of internal buffers/descriptors and fails frame TX.
PR: kern/168170
Reviewed by: bschmidt
MFC after: 1 month