These are going to be much more efficient on low end embedded systems
but unfortunately they make it .. less convenient to implement correct
bus barriers and debugging. They also didn't implement the register
serialisation workaround required for Owl (AR5416.)
So, just remove them for now. Later on I'll just inline the routines
from ah_osdep.c.
- Change order of data in if_iwmvar.h
(like it is in other drivers: defines, data structures,
vap/node structures, softc struct and locks); use indentation.
- Fix IWM_LOCK(_sc) / IWM_UNLOCK(_sc) macro.
- Add IWM_LOCK_INIT / DESTROY(sc) + fix mtx_init() usage.
- Wrap iwm_node casts into IWM_NODE() macro.
- Drop some fields:
* wt_hwqueue from Tx radiotap header;
* macaddr[6] from iwm_vap;
Approved by: adrian
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4753
tree parsing opt-out rather than opt-in. All FDT-based systems as well as
PowerPC systems with real Open Firmware use the CHRP-derived binding that
includes it, which makes SPARC the odd man out here. Making it opt-out
avoids astonishment on new platform bring up.
The ath hal and driver code all assume the world is an x86 or the
bus layer does an explicit bus flush after each operation (eg netbsd.)
However, we don't do that.
So, to be "correct" on platforms like sparc64, mips and ppc (and maybe
ARM, I am not sure), just do explicit barriers after each operation.
Now, this does slow things down a tad on embedded platforms but I'd
rather things be "correct" versus "fast." At some later point if someone
wishes it to be fast then we should add the barrier calls to the HAL and
driver.
Tested:
* carambola 2 (AR9331.)
rounding) has better spread. Implement fp16_sin() to go along with
fp16_cos(). In the rendering loop, switch from addition to subtraction
so the center of the pattern will be a trough rather than a peak. This
is completely arbitrary, of course, but looks better to me.
This is a port from openbsd. It's incomplete and unstable, but it's better
than nothing. I have no plans to MFC this until it's complete and stable.
Submitted by: kevlo
Add if_requestencap() interface method which is capable of calculating
various link headers for given interface. Right now there is support
for INET/INET6/ARP llheader calculation (IFENCAP_LL type request).
Other types are planned to support more complex calculation
(L2 multipath lagg nexthops, tunnel encap nexthops, etc..).
Reshape 'struct route' to be able to pass additional data (with is length)
to prepend to mbuf.
These two changes permits routing code to pass pre-calculated nexthop data
(like L2 header for route w/gateway) down to the stack eliminating the
need for other lookups. It also brings us closer to more complex scenarios
like transparently handling MPLS nexthops and tunnel interfaces.
Last, but not least, it removes layering violation introduced by flowtable
code (ro_lle) and simplifies handling of existing if_output consumers.
ARP/ND changes:
Make arp/ndp stack pre-calculate link header upon installing/updating lle
record. Interface link address change are handled by re-calculating
headers for all lles based on if_lladdr event. After these changes,
arpresolve()/nd6_resolve() returns full pre-calculated header for
supported interfaces thus simplifying if_output().
Move these lookups to separate ether_resolve_addr() function which ether
returs error or fully-prepared link header. Add <arp|nd6_>resolve_addr()
compat versions to return link addresses instead of pre-calculated data.
BPF changes:
Raw bpf writes occupied _two_ cases: AF_UNSPEC and pseudo_AF_HDRCMPLT.
Despite the naming, both of there have ther header "complete". The only
difference is that interface source mac has to be filled by OS for
AF_UNSPEC (controlled via BIOCGHDRCMPLT). This logic has to stay inside
BPF and not pollute if_output() routines. Convert BPF to pass prepend data
via new 'struct route' mechanism. Note that it does not change
non-optimized if_output(): ro_prepend handling is purely optional.
Side note: hackish pseudo_AF_HDRCMPLT is supported for ethernet and FDDI.
It is not needed for ethernet anymore. The only remaining FDDI user is
dev/pdq mostly untouched since 2007. FDDI support was eliminated from
OpenBSD in 2013 (sys/net/if_fddisubr.c rev 1.65).
Flowtable changes:
Flowtable violates layering by saving (and not correctly managing)
rtes/lles. Instead of passing lle pointer, pass pointer to pre-calculated
header data from that lle.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4102
We'll remove the per-channel control_work_queue because it can't properly
do serialization of message handling, e.g., when there are 2 NIC devices,
vmbus_channel_on_offer() -> hv_queue_work_item() has a race condition:
for an SMP VM, vmbus_channel_process_offer() can run concurrently on
different CPUs and if the second NIC's
vmbus_channel_process_offer() -> hv_vmbus_child_device_register() runs
first, the second NIC's name will be hn0 and the first NIC's name will
be hn1!
We can fix the race condition by removing the per-channel control_work_queue
and run all the message handlers in the global
hv_vmbus_g_connection.work_queue -- we'll do this in the next patch.
With the coming next patch, we have to run the non-blocking handlers
directly in the kernel thread vmbus_msg_swintr(), because the special
handling of sub-channel: when a sub-channel (e.g., of the storvsc driver)
is received and being handled in vmbus_channel_on_offer() running on the
global hv_vmbus_g_connection.work_queue, vmbus_channel_process_offer()
invokes channel->sc_creation_callback, i.e., storvsc_handle_sc_creation,
and the callback will invoke hv_vmbus_channel_open() -> hv_vmbus_post_message
and expect a further reply from the host, but the handling of the further
messag can't be done because the current message's handling hasn't finished
yet; as result, hv_vmbus_channel_open() -> sema_timedwait() will time out
and th device can't work.
Also renamed the handler type from hv_pfn_channel_msg_handler to
vmbus_msg_handler: the 'pfn' and 'channel' in the old name make no sense.
Submitted by: Dexuan Cui <decui microsoft com>
Reviewed by: royger
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4596
Now vmbus_channel_on_offer() -> vmbus_channel_process_offer() can
safely run on the global hv_vmbus_g_connection.work_queue now.
We remove the per-channel control_work_queue to achieve the proper
serialization of the message handling.
I removed the bogus TODO in vmbus_channel_on_offer(): a vmbus offer
can only come from the parent partition, i.e., the host.
PR: kern/205156
Submitted by: Dexuan Cui <decui microsoft com>
Reviewed by: Howard Su <howard0su gmail com>, delphij
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4597
coalescing and zipping multiple CQEs into a single merged CQE. The
feature is enabled by default and can be disabled by a sysctl.
Implementing this feature mlx5_cqwq_pop() has been separated from
mlx5e_get_cqe().
MFC after: 1 week
Submitted by: Mark Bloch <markb@mellanox.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4598
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
cperciva's libmd implementation is 5-30% faster
The same was done for SHA256 previously in r263218
cperciva's implementation was lacking SHA-384 which I implemented, validated against OpenSSL and the NIST documentation
Extend sbin/md5 to create sha384(1)
Chase dependancies on sys/crypto/sha2/sha2.{c,h} and replace them with sha512{c.c,.h}
Reviewed by: cperciva, des, delphij
Approved by: secteam, bapt (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3929
This space does not require DMA syncing. It reduces lock scope of the DMA
scratch space. It allows whole DMA scratch space to be used to I/O, so now
we can fetch up to ~1000 ports from SNS.
Due to the last fact, increase maximal number of ports from 256 to 1024.
IEEE 802.3 Clause 45 added backwards-compatible support for 2^16 PHY registers
through the addition of an additional device address frame.
Clause 45 addressing is used in 10Gbe PHYs, 802.3az EEE registers, etc. It may
make sense to provide a similar extension to the miibus interface, but I've
refrained from unilaterally doing so here.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landon@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4607
cards supported by cxgbe(4).
On the host side this driver interfaces with the storage stack via the
ICL (iSCSI Common Layer) in the kernel. On the wire the traffic is
standard iSCSI (SCSI over TCP as per RFC 3720/7143 etc.) that
interoperates with all other standards compliant implementations. The
driver is layered on top of the TOE driver (t4_tom) and promotes
connections being handled by t4_tom to iSCSI ULP (Upper Layer Protocol)
mode. Hardware assistance in this mode includes:
- Full TCP processing.
- iSCSI PDU identification and recovery within the TCP stream.
- Header and/or data digest insertion (tx) and verification (rx).
- Zero copy (both tx and rx).
Man page will follow in a separate commit in a couple of weeks.
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Before this change virtual ports control IOCBs were executed synchronously
via Execute IOCB mailbox command. It required exclusive use of scratch
space of driver and mailbox registers of the hardware. Because of that
shared resources use this code could not really sleep, having to spin for
completion, blocking any other operation.
This change introduces new asynchronous design, sending the IOCBs directly
on request queue and gracefully waiting for their return on response queue.
Returned IOCBs are identified with unified handle space from r292725.
The mdio driver interface is generally useful for devices that require
MDIO without the full MII bus interface. This lifts the driver/interface
out of etherswitch(4), and adds a mdio(4) man page.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landon@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4606
I am not sure why this was split long ago, but I see no reason for it.
At this point this unification just slightly reduces memory usage, but
as next step I plan to reuse shared handle space for other IOCB types.
This is a work in progress; bringing the interface down stops further
use. It only happens on RT5350/MT7620.
This is based on work by Alexander A. Mityaev <sansan@adm.ua>.
Submitted by: Stanislav Galabov <galabov@gmail.com>
available. As with MSI interrupts these can be disabled by setting
hw.usb.xhci.msix to 0 in the loader.
MSI-X interrupts are needed on some hardware, for example the Cavium
ThunderX only supports them, and with this we don't fall back to polling.
PR: 204378
Reviewed by: hselasky, jhb
MFC after: 1 week (after r292669)
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4698
r291227:
s/is->is_conn/ic to shorten things a bit.
r291228:
Do not generate PDUs with payload greater than max_data_segment_length.
It is perhaps preferable to have a separate limit for send instead of
reusing the receive limit. I'll discuss with trasz@ and mav@ before
pulling this into head.
r292618:
Add comment to go with r291228.
Add support for two new devices: X552 SFP+ 10 GbE, and the single port
version of X550T.
Submitted by: erj
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4186
in igb and fix a wrap-around bug.
Reviewed by: hiren
Obtained from: Jason (j@nitrology.com)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: LimeLight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4039
While here, explicitly note the requirement that the BAR(s) must be
allocated prior to calling pci_alloc_msix().
Reviewed by: andrew, emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4688
greater than len_on_bd, before invoking the routine to handle jumbo over SGL
(bxe_service_rxsgl()).
Add counters for number of jumbo_over_SGL packets (rx_bxe_service_rxsgl) and
erroneous jumbo_over_SGL packets (rx_erroneous_jumbo_sge_pkts)
Fix formatting in bxe_sysctl_state()
MFC after:5 days