- Do not use mmap() by default; it can be enabled by --mmap
- Add some minor optimizations for -u
- Update manual page according to the changes
Submitted by: Oleg Moskalenko <oleg.moskalenko@citrix.com>
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
On ARM, binutils are adding '$a' symbols in the symbol table for
every function (in addition to normal symbol). When gprof(1) looks
up symbol name, it often reads '$a' instead of proper function name,
because it find it first. With this fix, when read symbol name
begins with '$' and previous symbol has the same address, it will
use previous symbol name (which is proper function name).
Obtained from: Semihalf
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