On systems with HZ=100 it caused Intel eDP video output initialization
(and Xorg startup) to take several minutes instead of several seconds.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
14.00.00.01-fbsd.
Their description of the changes is as follows:
1. Copyright contents has been changed in all respective .c
and .h files
2. Support for WRITE12 and READ12 for direct-io (warpdrive only)
has been added.
3. Driver has added checks to see if Drive has READ_CAP_16
support before sending it down to the device.
If SPC3_SID_PROTECT flag is set in the inquiry data, the
device supports protection information, and must support
the 16 byte read capacity command, otherwise continue without
sending read cap 16. This will optimize driver performance,
since it will not send READ_CAP_16 to the drive which does
not have support of READ_CAP_16.
4. With new approach, "MPTIOCTL_RESET_ADAPTER" IOCTL will not
use DELAY() which is busy loop implementation.
It will use <msleep> (Better way to sleep without busy
loop). Also from the HBA reset code path and some other
places, DELAY() is replaced with msleep() or "pause()",
which is based on sleep/wakeup style calls. Driver use
msleep()/pause() instead of DELAY based on CAN_SLEEP/NO_SLEEP
flags to avoid busy loop which is not required all the
time.e.a
a. While driver is getting loaded, driver calls most of the
commands with NO_SLEEP.
b. When Driver is functional and it needs Reinit of HBA,
CAN_SLEEP flag is used.
5. <mpslsi> driver is not Endian safe. It will not work on Big
Endian machines like Sparc and PowerPC platforms because it
assumes it is running on a Little Endian machine.
Driver code is modified such way that it does not assume CPU
arch is Little Endian.
a. All places where Driver interacts from HBA to Host, it
converts Little Endian format to CPU format.
b. All places where Driver interacts from Host to HBA, it
converts CPU format to Little Endian.
6. Findout memory leaks in FreeBSD Driver and resolve those,
such as memory leak in targ's luns creation/deletion.
Also added additional checks to see memory allocation
success/fail.
7. Add loginfo prints as debug message, i.e. When FW sends any
loginfo, Driver should print those as debug message.
This will help for debugging purpose.
8. There is possibility to get config request timeout. Current
driver is able to detect config request timetout, but it does
not do anything on config_request timeout. Driver should
call mps_reinit() if any request_poll (which is called as
part of config_request) is time out.
9. cdb length check is required for 32 byte CDB. Add correct mpi
control value for 32 bit CDB as below while submitting SCSI IO
Request to controller.
mpi_control |= 4 << MPI2_SCSIIO_CONTROL_ADDCDBLEN_SHIFT;
10. Check the actual status of Message unit reset
(mps_message_unit_reset).Previously FreeBSD Driver just writes
MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_MESSAGE_UNIT_RESET and never check the ack
(it just wait for 50 millisecond). So, Driver now check the
status of "MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_MESSAGE_UNIT_RESET" after writing
it to the FW.
Now it also checking for whether doorbell ack uses msleep with
proper sleep flags, instead of <DELAY>.
11. Previously CAM does not detect Multi-Lun Devices. In order to
detect Multi-Lun Devices by CAM the driver needs following change
set:
a. There is "max_lun" field which Driver need to set based on
hw/fw support. Currently LSI released driver does not set
this field.
b. Default of "max_lun" should not be 0 in OS, but it is
currently set to 0 in CAM layer.
c. Export max_lun capacity to 255
12. Driver will not reset target info after port enable complete and
also do Device removal when Device remove from FW. The detail
description is as follows
a. When Driver receive WD PD add events, it will add all
information in driver local data structure.
b. Only for WD, we have below checks after port enable
completes, where driver clear off all information retrieved
at #1.
if ((sc->WD_available &&
(sc->WD_hide_expose == MPS_WD_HIDE_ALWAYS)) ||
(sc->WD_valid_config && (sc->WD_hide_expose ==
MPS_WD_HIDE_IF_VOLUME)) {
// clear off target data structure.
}
It is mainly not to attach PDs to OS.
FreeBSD does bus rescan as older Parallel scsi style. So Driver
needs to handle which Drive is visible to OS. That is a reason
we have to clear off targ information for PDs.
Again, above logic was implemented long time ago. Similar concept
we have for non-wd also. For that, LSI have introduced different
logic to hide PDs.
Eventually, because of above gap, when Phy goes offline, we
observe below failure. That is what Driver is not doing complete
removal of device with FW. (which was pointed by Scott)
Apr 5 02:39:24 Freebsd7 kernel: mpslsi0: mpssas_prepare_remove
Apr 5 02:39:24 Freebsd7 kernel: mpssas_prepare_remove 497 : invalid handle 0xe
Now Driver will not reset target info after port enable complete
and also will do Device removal when Device remove from FW.
13. Returning "CAM_SEL_TIMEOUT" instead of "CAM_TID_INVALID"
error code on request to the Target IDs that have no devices
conected at that moment. As if "CAM_TID_INVALID" error code
is returned to the CAM Layaer then it results in a huge chain
of errors in verbose kernel messages on boot and every
hot-plug event.
Submitted by: Sreekanth Reddy <Sreekanth.Reddy@lsi.com>
MFC after: 3 days
the request up the tree in order to be on the safe side. Growing windows
in this case would mean to switch resources to positive decoding and
it's unclear how to correctly handle this. At least with ALi/ULi M5249
PCI-PCI bridges, this also just doesn't work out of the box.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 3 days
queue is empty or the firmware will go nuts.
PR: kern/167806
Tested by: osa@, Brandon Gooch (earlier version),
Bojan Petrovic (earlier version)
MFC after: 3 days
the TX queue is empty, there won't be a TX done notification, effectly
resulting in an mbuf leak. The correct way to handle this is to free
up mbufs on both BA and TX done notifications up to the last sent seqno.
Tested by: osa@
MFC after: 3 days
with AMPDU aggregate delimiters.
If there's an OFDM restart during an aggregate, the hardware ACKs
the previous frame, but communicates the RXed frame to the hardware
as having had CRC delimiter error + OFDM_RESTART phy error.
The frame however didn't have a CRC error and since the hardware ACKed
the aggregate to the sender, it thinks the frame was received.
Since I have no idea how often this occurs in the real world, add a
debug statement so trigger whenever this occurs. I'd appreciate an
email if someone finds this particular situation is triggered.
The Linux ath9k btcoex code is based off of this code.
Note this doesn't actually implement functional btcoex; there's some
driver glue and a whole lot of verification that is required.
On the other hand, I do have the AR9285+BT and AR9287+BT NICs which
this code supports..
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros, Linux ath9k
to attach to target capable HBAs that implement the old immediate
notify (XPT_IMMED_NOTIFY) and notify acknowledge (XPT_NOTIFY_ACK)
CCBs. The new API has been in place since SVN change 196008 in
2009.
The solution is two-fold: fix CTL to handle the responses from the
HBAs, and convert the HBA drivers in question to use the new API.
These drivers have not been tested with CTL, so how well they will
interoperate with CTL is unknown.
scsi_target.c: Update the userland target example code to use the
new immediate notify API.
scsi_ctl.c: Detect when an immediate notify CCB is returned
with CAM_REQ_INVALID or CAM_PROVIDE_FAIL status,
and just free it.
Fix a duplicate assignment.
aic79xx.c,
aic79xx_osm.c: Update the aic79xx driver to use the new API.
Target mode is not enabled on for this driver, so
the changes will have no practical effect.
aic7xxx.c,
aic7xxx_osm.c: Update the aic7xxx driver to use the new API.
sbp_targ.c: Update the firewire target code to work with the
new API.
mpt_cam.c: Update the mpt(4) driver to work with the new API.
Target mode is only enabled for Fibre Channel
mpt(4) devices.
MFC after: 3 days
exported via PCI passthrough.
- Do not check for a specific physical function (PF) before claiming a device.
Different PFs have different device-ids so this check is redundant anyway.
- Obtain the PF# from the WHOAMI register instead of pci_get_function().
- Setup the memory windows using the real BAR0 address, not what the VM says it
is.
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
not by some hint setting. Do more preparations for FC-Tape.
Clean up resource counting for 24XX or later chipsets so
we find out after EXEC_FIRMWARE what is actually supported.
Set target mode exchange count based upon whether or not
we are supporting simultaneous target/initiator mode. Clean
up some old (pre-24XX) xfwoption and zfwoption issues.
Sponsored by: Spectralogic
MFC after: 3 days
the assumption that ath_softc doesn't change size based on build time
configuration.
I picked up on this because suddenly radar stuff didn't work; and
although the ath_dfs code was setting sc_dodfs=1, the main ath driver
saw sc_dodfs=0.
So for now, include opt_ath.h in driver source files. This seems like
the sane thing to do anyway.
I'll have to do a pass over the code at some later stage and turn
the radiotap TX/RX structs into malloc'ed memory, rather than in-line
inside of ath_softc. I'd rather like to keep ath_softc the same
layout regardless of configuration parameters.
Pointy hat to: adrian
a buffer pointer.
For large radar pulses, the AR9130 and later will return a series of
FFT results for software processing. These can overflow a single 2KB
buffer on longer pulses. This would result in undefined buffer behaviour.
This includes a few new fields in each RXed frame:
* per chain RX RSSI (ctl and ext);
* current RX chainmask;
* EVM information;
* PHY error code;
* basic RX status bits (CRC error, PHY error, etc).
This is primarily to allow me to do some userland PHY error processing
for radar and spectral scan data. However since EVM and per-chain RSSI
is provided, others may find it useful for a variety of tasks.
The default is to not compile in the radiotap vendor extensions, primarily
because tcpdump doesn't seem to handle the particular vendor extension
layout I'm using, and I'd rather not break existing code out there that
may be (badly) parsing the radiotap data.
Instead, add the option 'ATH_ENABLE_RADIOTAP_VENDOR_EXT' to your kernel
configuration file to enable these options.
and the CRC error bits set. The radar payload is correct.
When this happens, the stack doesn't see them PHY error frames and
isn't interpreted as a PHY error. So, no radar detection and no radiotap
PHY error handling.
Now, this may introduce some weird issues if the MAC sends up some other
combination of CRC error + PHY error frames; this commit would break that
and mark them as PHY errors instead of CRC errors.
I may tinker with this a little more to pass radar/early radar/spectral
frames up as PHY errors if the CRC bit is set, to restore the previous
behaviour (where if CRC is set on a PHY error frame, it's marked as a CRC
error rather than PHY error.)
Tested on: AR5416, over the air, to a USRP N200 which is generating a
large number of a variety of radar pulses.
TODO: Test on AR9130, AR9160, AR9280 (and maybe radar pulses on
2GHz on AR9285/AR9287.)
PR: kern/169362
a da(4) instance going away while GEOM is still probing it.
In this case, the GEOM disk class instance has been created by
disk_create(), and the taste of the disk is queued in the GEOM
event queue.
While that event is queued, the da(4) instance goes away. When the
open call comes into the da(4) driver, it dereferences the freed
(but non-NULL) peripheral pointer provided by GEOM, which results
in a panic.
The solution is to add a callback to the GEOM disk code that is
called when all of its resources are cleaned up. This is
implemented inside GEOM by adding an optional callback that is
called when all consumers have detached from a provider, and the
provider is about to be deleted.
scsi_cd.c,
scsi_da.c: In the register routine for the cd(4) and da(4)
routines, acquire a reference to the CAM peripheral
instance just before we call disk_create().
Use the new GEOM disk d_gone() callback to register
a callback (dadiskgonecb()/cddiskgonecb()) that
decrements the peripheral reference count once GEOM
has finished cleaning up its resources.
In the cd(4) driver, clean up open and close
behavior slightly. GEOM makes sure we only get one
open() and one close call, so there is no need to
set an open flag and decrement the reference count
if we are not the first open.
In the cd(4) driver, use cam_periph_release_locked()
in a couple of error scenarios to avoid extra mutex
calls.
geom.h: Add a new, optional, providergone callback that
is called when a provider is about to be deleted.
geom_disk.h: Add a new d_gone() callback to the GEOM disk
interface.
Bump the DISK_VERSION to version 2. This probably
should have been done after a couple of previous
changes, especially the addition of the d_getattr()
callback.
geom_disk.c: Add a providergone callback for the disk class,
g_disk_providergone(), that calls the user's
d_gone() callback if it exists.
Bump the DISK_VERSION to 2.
geom_subr.c: In g_destroy_provider(), call the providergone
callback if it has been provided.
In g_new_geomf(), propagate the class's
providergone callback to the new geom instance.
blkfront.c: Callers of disk_create() are supposed to pass in
DISK_VERSION, not an explicit disk API version
number. Update the blkfront driver to do that.
disk.9: Update the disk(9) man page to include information
on the new d_gone() callback, as well as the
previously added d_getattr() callback, d_descr
field, and HBA PCI ID fields.
MFC after: 5 days
and CAM_LUN_INVALID for case of missing devices. In removes tons of error
messages from CAM during bus scans.
Reported and tested by: Mike Tancsa <mike@sentex.net>
MFC after: 3 days
- Stateful TCP offload drivers for Terminator 3 and 4 (T3 and T4) ASICs.
These are available as t3_tom and t4_tom modules that augment cxgb(4)
and cxgbe(4) respectively. The cxgb/cxgbe drivers continue to work as
usual with or without these extra features.
- iWARP driver for Terminator 3 ASIC (kernel verbs). T4 iWARP in the
works and will follow soon.
Build-tested with make universe.
30s overview
============
What interfaces support TCP offload? Look for TOE4 and/or TOE6 in the
capabilities of an interface:
# ifconfig -m | grep TOE
Enable/disable TCP offload on an interface (just like any other ifnet
capability):
# ifconfig cxgbe0 toe
# ifconfig cxgbe0 -toe
Which connections are offloaded? Look for toe4 and/or toe6 in the
output of netstat and sockstat:
# netstat -np tcp | grep toe
# sockstat -46c | grep toe
Reviewed by: bz, gnn
Sponsored by: Chelsio communications.
MFC after: ~3 months (after 9.1, and after ensuring MFC is feasible)
and crosschecks against firmware documentation. We now check and report
FC firmware attributes and at least are now prepared for the upper 48 bits
of f/w attributes (which are probably for the 8100 or later cards). This
involed changing how inbits and outbits are calculated for varios commands,
hopefully clearer and cleaner. This also caused me to clean up the actual
mailbox register usage. Finally, we are now unconditionally using a CRN
for initiator mode.
A longstanding issue with the 2400/2500 is that they do *not* support
a "Prefer PTP followed by loop", which explains why enabling that
caused the f/w to crash.
A slightly more invasive change is to let the firmware load entirely
drive whether multi_id support is enabled or not.
Sponsored by: Spectralogic
MFC after: 1 week
D2500CC which I have, syscons in text-mode fails to show the expected
contents due to write errors into video-memory.
At least one of the causes is that we copy from syscons internal buffer
to the video memory with optimized bcopy(9) which uses >16bit operations.
Until now, 32bit and wider operations have always worked on the video
memory, but since I cannot find a single source which says that this
SHALL work, and since these chipsets/bugs are now out there, this
commit changes syscons to always use 16bit copies on i386 & amd64.
This may be relevevant for PR's:
166262
166639
and various other bug reports floating elsewhere on the net, but
I lack hardware to test those.
Due to some differences in MSRs between Xeon Sandy Bridge and Core Sandy
Bridge (Model 0x2A), wrmsr() may generate in a GP# fault exception and so a
panic of the machine.
Approved by: gnn (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
* Add an OS_A_REG_WRITE() routine - analog writes require a 100usec delay
on AR9280 and later, so create a method to do it.
* Use it for the AR9287 analog writes.
* Re-indent and style(9) the code.
This just requires a little HAL change (add a new config parameter) and
some glue in if_ath_pci.c, however I'm leaving this up for someone else
to do.
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros
interacts with some non-highpoint controollers. Change attach_generic to
be off by default.
PR: kern/168910
Submitted by: Richard Yao <ryao@gentoo.org>
Approved by: cperciva
No objections by: -hackers
Obtained from: Gentoo FreeBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
* Use ATH_RC_NUM instead of '4' when iterating over the ratecontrol series
array.
* A few style(9) fixes, hopefully no regressions here.
* Add some comments that better describe what's going on.
The existing code tries to use the beacon miss timer to signal that the AP
has gone away. Unfortunately this doesn't seem to be behaving itself.
I'll try to investigate why this is for the sake of completeness.
The result is the STA will stay "associated" to the AP it was associated
with when it suspended. It never receives a bmiss notification so it
never tries reassociating.
PR: kern/169084
This includes adding support for skipping FTDI interfaces used for JTAG
leaving them for userland and just attaching to the RS232 half, similarly
to how the corresponding Linux drivers handles these kind of adapters.
While at it, sort uftdi_devs and return BUS_PROBE_SPECIFIC (because
uftdi_probe() alters the instance variables for better or worse as do
other probe routines of USB drivers) instead of 0.
- Remove duplicated entries for BeagleBone.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
- Remove some stray lines.
MFC after: 3 days
MAXPHYS should be based on PAGE_SIZE rather than SYM_CONF_DMA_BOUNDARY.
While at it, reuse the SYM_CONF_MAX_SG macro for specifying the maximum
number of DMA tags so sym(4) itself doesn't size memory beyond what's
required for handling MAXPHYS.
PR: 168928
MFC after: 3 days
* Resize some types. In particular, bfs_seqno can be uint16_t for now.
Previous work would assign the unassigned seqno a value of -1, which
I obviously can't do here.
* Remove bfs_pktdur. It was in the original code but nothing so far uses
it.
This gets ath_buf down (on my i386 system) to 292 bytes from 300 bytes.
I'd rather it be much, much smaller.
fixed for 802.11n TX, this needs to be disabled or users wlil see randomly
hanging aggregation sessions.
Whilst I'm here, remove the warning about 802.11n being full of dragons.
It's nowhere near that scary now.
ath_start() is called.
This (defaults to 10 frames) gives for a little headway in the TX ath_buf
allocation, so buffer cloning is still possible.
This requires a lot omre experimenting and tuning.
It also doesn't stop a node/TID from consuming all of the available
ath_buf's, especially when the node is going through high packet loss
or only talking at a low TX rate. It also doesn't stop a paused TID
from taking all of the ath_bufs. I'll look at fixing that up in subsequent
commits.
PR: kern/168170
growing "downward" (moving the start address down). First, an off by
one error caused the end address to be moved down an extra alignment
chunk unnecessarily. Second, when aligning the new candidate starting
address, the wrong bits were masked off.
Tested by: Andrey Zonov andrey zonov org
MFC after: 3 days
traffic.
* Create sc_mgmt_txbuf and sc_mgmt_txdesc, initialise/free them appropriately.
* Create an enum to represent buffer types in the API.
* Extend ath_getbuf() and _ath_getbuf_locked() to take the above enum.
* Right now anything sent via ic_raw_xmit() allocates via ATH_BUFTYPE_MGMT.
This may not be very useful.
* Add ATH_BUF_MGMT flag (ath_buf.bf_flags) which indicates the current buffer
is a mgmt buffer and should go back onto the mgmt free list.
* Extend 'txagg' to include debugging output for both normal and mgmt txbufs.
* When checking/clearing ATH_BUF_BUSY, do it on both TX pools.
Tested:
* STA mode, with heavy UDP injection via iperf. This filled the TX queue
however BARs were still going out successfully.
TODO:
* Initialise the mgmt buffers with ATH_BUF_MGMT and then ensure the right
type is being allocated and freed on the appropriate list. That'd save
a write operation (to bf->bf_flags) on each buffer alloc/free.
* Test on AP mode, ensure that BAR TX and probe responses go out nicely
when the main TX queue is filled (eg with paused traffic to a TID,
awaiting a BAR to complete.)
PR: kern/168170
then solves because of cache coherency issues. This fixes periodic error
messages on console and command timeouts.
- Patch SATA PHY configuration for 65nm SoCs to improve SNR same as
Linux does.
MFC after: 2 weeks
(or direct dispatch) behind the TXQ lock (which, remember, is doubling
as the TID lock too for now.)
This ensures that:
(a) the sequence number and the CCMP PN allocation is done together;
(b) overlapping transmit paths don't interleave frames, so we don't
end up with the original issue that triggered kern/166190.
Ie, that we don't end up with seqno A, B in thread 1, C, D in
thread 2, and they being queued to the software queue as "A C D B"
or similar, leading to the BAW stalls.
This has been tested:
* both STA and AP modes with INVARIANTS and WITNESS;
* TCP and UDP TX;
* both STA->AP and AP->STA.
STA is a Routerstation Pro (single CPU MIPS) and the AP is a dual-core
Centrino.
PR: kern/166190
scheduled from the head of the software queue rather than trying to
queue the newly given frame.
This leads to some rather unfortunate out of order (but still valid
as it's inside the BAW) frame TX.
This now:
* Always queues the frame at the end of the software queue;
* Tries to direct dispatch the frame at the head of the software queue,
to try and fill up the hardware queue.
TODO:
* I should likely try to queue as many frames to the hardware as I can
at this point, rather than doing one at a time;
* ath_tx_xmit_aggr() may fail and this code assumes that it'll schedule
the TID. Otherwise TX may stall.
PR: kern/166190
This is an unfortunate byproduct of how the routine is used - it's called
with the head frame on the queue, but if the frame is failed, it's inserted
into the tail of the queue.
Because of this, the sequence numbers would get all shuffled around and
the BAW would be bumped past this sequence number, that's now at the
end of the software queue. Then, whenever it's time for that frame
to be transmitted, it'll be immediately outside of the BAW and TX will
stall until the BAW catches up.
It can also result in all kinds of weird duplicate BAW frames, leading
to hilarious panics.
PR: kern/166190
This showed up when doing heavy UDP throughput on SMP machines.
The problem with this is because the 802.11 sequence number is being
allocated separately to the CCMP PN replay number (which is assigned
during ieee80211_crypto_encap()).
Under significant throughput (200+ MBps) the TX path would be stressed
enough that frame TX/retry would force sequence number and PN allocation
to be out of order. So once the frames were reordered via 802.11 seqnos,
the CCMP PN would be far out of order, causing most frames to be discarded
by the receiver.
I've fixed this in some local work by being forced to:
(a) deal with the issues that lead to the parallel TX causing out of
order sequence numbers in the first place;
(b) fix all the packet queuing issues which lead to strange (but mostly
valid) TX.
I'll begin fixing these in a subsequent commit or five.
PR: kern/166190
Return PROTO_ATA protocol in response to XPT_PATH_INQ.
smartmontools uses it to identify ATA devices and I don't know any other
place now where it is important. It could probably use XPT_GDEV_TYPE
instead for more accurate protocol information, but let it live for now.
Reported by: matthew
MFC after: 3 days
suspend/resume procedures are minimized among them.
common:
- Add global cpuset suspended_cpus to indicate APs are suspended/resumed.
- Remove acpi_waketag and acpi_wakemap from acpivar.h (no longer used).
- Add some variables in acpi_wakecode.S in order to minimize the difference
among amd64 and i386.
- Disable load_cr3() because now CR3 is restored in resumectx().
amd64:
- Add suspend/resume related members (such as MSR) in PCB.
- Modify savectx() for above new PCB members.
- Merge acpi_switch.S into cpu_switch.S as resumectx().
i386:
- Merge(and remove) suspendctx() into savectx() in order to match with
amd64 code.
Reviewed by: attilio@, acpi@
until transport will do some probe actions (at least soft reset).
Make ATA/SATA SIMs to not report bogus and confusing PROTO_ATA protocol.
Make ATA/SATA transport to fill that gap by reporting protocol to SIM with
XPT_SET_TRAN_SETTINGS and patching XPT_GET_TRAN_SETTINGS results if needed.
Put a bandaid to prevent ixgbe(4) from completely locking up the system
under high load. Our platform has a few CPU cores and a single active
ixgbe(4) port with 4 queues. Under high enough traffic load, at about
7.5GBs and 700,000 packets/sec (outbound), the entire system would
deadlock. What we found was that each CPU was in an endless loop on a
different ix taskqueue thread. The OACTIVE flag had gotten set on each
queue, and the ixgbe_handle_queue() function was continuously rescheduling
itself via the taskqueue_enqueue. Since all CPUs were busy with their
taskqueue threads, the ixgbe_local_timer() function couldn't run to clear
the OACTIVE flag.
Submitted by: scottl
MFC after: 1 week
it turns out that it negatively affects performance. I'm stil investigating
exactly why deferring the IO causes such negative TCP performance but
doesn't affect UDP preformance.
Leave the ath_tx_kick() change in there however; it's going to be useful
to have that there for if_transmit() work.
PR: kern/168649
called to "kick" along TX.
For now, schedule a taskqueue call.
Later on I may go back to the direct call of ath_rx_tasklet() - but for
now, this will do.
I've tested UDP and TCP TX. UDP TX still achieves 240MBit, but TCP
TX gets stuck at around 100MBit or so, instead of the 150MBit it should
be at. I'll re-test with no ACPI/power/sleep states enabled at startup
and see what effect it has.
This is in preparation for supporting an if_transmit() path, which will
turn ath_tx_kick() into a NUL operation (as there won't be an ifnet
queue to service.)
Tested:
* AR9280 STA
TODO:
* test on AR5416, AR9160, AR928x STA/AP modes
PR: kern/168649
implementing parallel TX and TX/RX completion can be done without
simply abusing long-held locks.
Right now, multiple concurrent ath_start() entries can result in
frames being dequeued out of order. Well, they're dequeued in order
fine, but if there's any preemption or race between CPUs between:
* removing the frame from the ifnet, and
* calling and runningath_tx_start(), until the frame is placed on a
software or hardware TXQ
Then although dequeueing the frame is in-order, queueing it to the hardware
may be out of order.
This is solved in a lot of other drivers by just holding a TX lock over
a rather long period of time. This lets them continue to direct dispatch
without races between dequeue and hardware queue.
Note to observers: if_transmit() doesn't necessarily solve this.
It removes the ifnet from the main path, but the same issue exists if
there's some intermediary queue (eg a bufring, which as an aside also
may pull in ifnet when you're using ALTQ.)
So, until I can sit down and code up a much better way of doing parallel
TX, I'm going to leave the TX path using a deferred taskqueue task.
What I will likely head towards is doing a direct dispatch to hardware
or software via if_transmit(), but it'll require some driver changes to
allow queues to be made without using the really large ath_buf / ath_desc
entries.
TODO:
* Look at how feasible it'll be to just do direct dispatch to
ath_tx_start() from if_transmit(), avoiding doing _any_ intermediary
serialisation into a global queue. This may break ALTQ for example,
so I have to be delicate.
* It's quite likely that I should break up ath_tx_start() so it
deposits frames onto the software queues first, and then only fill
in the 802.11 fields when it's being queued to the hardware.
That will make the if_transmit() -> software queue path very
quick and lightweight.
* This has some very bad behaviour when using ACPI and Cx states.
I'll do some subsequent analysis using KTR and schedgraph and file
a follow-up PR or two.
PR: kern/168649
EARLY_BUILD macro: the -Qunused-arguments flag isn't passed anymore when
building this particular program. However, with clang 3.1 and -Werror,
such unused argument warnings are flagged as errors, causing buildkernel
to fail at this stage, due to the -nostdinc flag passed during linking.
Since the -nostdinc flag isn't actually needed, just remove it.
X-MFC-With: r236528
- Make the device description match the driver name.
- Identify the chip variant based on the JEDEC and use that information
to use the proper values for page count, offset and size instead of
hardcoding a AT45DB642x with 2^N byte page support disabled.
- Take advantage of bioq_takefirst().
- Given that CONTINUOUS_ARRAY_READ_HF (0x0b) command isn't even mentioned
in Atmel's DataFlash Application Note, as suggested by the previous
comment may not work on all all devices and actually doesn't properly
on at least AT45DB321D (JEDEC 0x1f2701), rewrite at45d_task() to use
CONTINUOUS_ARRAY_READ (0xe8) for reading instead. This rewrite is laid
out in a way allowing to easily add support for BIO_DELETE later on.
- Add support for reads and writes not starting on a page boundary.
- Verify the flash content after writing.
- Let at45d_task() gracefully handle errors on SPI transfers and the
device not becoming ready afterwards again. [1]
- Use DEVMETHOD_END. [1]
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers. [1]
Additional testing by: Ian Lepore
Submitted by: Ian Lepore [1]
MFC after: 1 week
Make the default role NONE if target mode is selected. This
allows ctl(8) to switch to/from target mode via knob settings.
If we default to role 'none', this causes a reset of the
24XX f/w which then causes initiators to wake up and notice
when we come online.
Reviewed by: kdm
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectralogic
(described in ACPICA source code).
- Move intr_disable() and intr_restore() from acpi_wakeup.c to acpi.c
and call AcpiLeaveSleepStatePrep() in interrupt disabled context.
- Add acpi_wakeup_machdep() to execute wakeup MD procedures and call
it twice in interrupt disabled/enabled context (ia64 version is
just dummy).
- Rename wakeup_cpus variable in acpi_sleep_machdep() to suspcpus in
order to be shared by acpi_sleep_machdep() and acpi_wakeup_machdep().
- Move identity mapping related code to acpi_install_wakeup_handler()
(i386 version) for preparation of x86/acpica/acpi_wakeup.c
(MFC candidate).
Reviewed by: jkim@
MFC after: 2 days
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
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
- 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
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
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
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
* 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).
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
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. :)
works with new generations of GPUs (IronLake, SandyBridge and
supposedly IvyBridge).
The driver is not connected to the build yet.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
operations required by GEMified i915.ko. It also attaches to SandyBridge
and IvyBridge CPU northbridges now.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
into partitions.
Partitions are created based on data in dts file which are
extracted and interpreted by slicer.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation, Juniper Networks
I've come across a weird scenario in net80211 where two TX streams will
happily attempt to setup an aggregation session together.
If we're very lucky, it happens concurrently on separate CPUs and the
total lack of locking in the net80211 aggregation code causes this stuff
to race. Badly.
So >1 call would occur to the ath(4) addba start, but only one call would
complete to addba complete or timeout. The TID would thus stay paused.
The real fix is to implement some proper per-node (or maybe per-TID)
locking in net80211, which then could be leveraged by the ath(4) TX
aggregation code.
Whilst I'm at it, shuffle around the debugging messages a bit.
I like to keep people on their toes.
queued internally. This works around issue in the isci HAL where it cannot
accept new I/O to a device after a resetting->ready state transition until
the completion context has unwound.
This issue was found by submitting non-tagged CCBs through pass(4) interface
to a SATA disk with an extremely small timeout value (5ms). This would trigger
internal resets with I/O in the isci(4) internal queues.
The small timeout value had not been intentional (and original reporter has
since changed his test to use 5sec instead), but it did uncover this corner
case that would result in a hung disk.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reported and tested by: Ravi Pokala <rpokala at panasas dot com>
Reviewed by: scottl (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
disabled or the system is in shutdown procedure.
This should fix the problem which kernel never response to the sleep
button press events after the message `suspend request ignored (not
ready yet)'.
MFC after: 3 days
There's some TX path TDMA code in if_ath_tx.c which should be migrated
out, but first I should likely try and verify/fix/repair the TDMA support
in 9.x and -HEAD.
* migrate the rx processing out into if_ath_rx.c
* migrate the TSF functions into if_ath_tsf.h, as inlines
This is in prepration for supporting the EDMA RX routines, required to
support the AR93xx series NICs.
TODO:
* ath_start() shouldn't be private, but it's called as part of
the RX path. I should likely migrate ath_rx_tasklet() back into
if_ath.c and then return this to be 'static'. The RX code really
shouldn't need to see TX routines (and vice versa.)
* ath_beacon_* should be in if_ath_beacon.[ch].
* ath_tdma_* should be in if_ath_tdma.[ch] ...
Supermicro LCD screen modules seem to not support accessing reports through
the control pipes, but working fine with the interrupt pipes.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
The NAND Flash environment consists of several distinct components:
- NAND framework (drivers harness for NAND controllers and NAND chips)
- NAND simulator (NANDsim)
- NAND file system (NAND FS)
- Companion tools and utilities
- Documentation (manual pages)
This work is still experimental. Please use with caution.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation, Juniper Networks
add some more BAR debugging logic.
* Change the definition of ath_debug and ath_softc.sc_debug from
int to uint64_t;
* Change the relevant sysctls;
* Add a new BAR TX debugging field;
* Use this in if_ath_tx.
This has been tested by using the sysctl program, which happily allows
for fields > 32 bits to be configured.
Although I _should_ handle the other errors in various ways (specifically
errors like FILT), treating them as having transmitted successfully
is completely wrong. Here, they'd be counted as successful and the BAW
would be advanced.. but the RX side wouldn't have received them.
The specific errors I've been seeing here are HAL_TXERR_FILT.
This patch does fix the issue - I've tested it using -i 0.001 pings
(enough to start aggregation) and now the behaviour is correct:
* The RX side never sees a "moved window" error, and
* The TX side sends BARs as needed, with the RX side correctly handling
them.
PR: kern/167902
depending upon the bootloader initialising it.
The aim is to eventually support a full switch set and reinitialisation
rather than relying on a consistent bootloader setup.
Remove the port flood config from arswitch.c, it's not yet used and
it's totally incorrect.
Whilst I'm here, also add in a comment describing why the full switch
reset is disabled.
Obtained from: Linux (OpenWRT) - Values
size for the AR7240.
* Include SM/MS macros, thanks to ath_hal(4).
* This field is for normal packets, VLAN and other headers are added to
this by the switch device.
* Set the MTU to 1536, to match what is done in Linux. Use the SM
macro to write this field.
Obtained from: Atheros (AR7240 datasheet), Linux OpenWRT (MTU default)
a taskqueue.
This gives a 16% performance improvement under high load on slow systems,
especially when vr shares an interrupt with another device, which is
common with the Alix x86 boards.
Contrary to the other devices, I left the interrupt processing for loop
in because there was no significant difference in performance and this
should avoid enqueuing more taskqueues unnecessarily.
We also decided to move the vr_start_locked() call inside the for loop
because we found out that it helps performance since TCP ACKs now have a
chance to go out quicker.
Reviewed by: yongari (older version, same idea)
Discussed with: yongari, jhb
to allow drivers to handle request completion directly without passing
them to the CAM SWI thread removing extra context switch.
Modify all ATA/SATA drivers to use them.
Reviewed by: gibbs, ken
MFC after: 2 weeks
* Add in the AR724x support. It probes the same as an AR8216/AR8316, so
just add in a hint to force the probe success rather than auto-detecting
it.
* Add in the missing entries from conf/files, lacking in the previous
commit.
The register values and CPU port / mirror port initialisation value was
obtained from Linux OpenWRT ag71xx_ar7240.c.
The DELAY(1000) to let things settle is my local workaround. For some
reason, PHY4 doesn't seem to probe very reliably without it. It's quite
possible that we're missing some MDIO bus initialisation code in if_arge
for the AR724x case. As I dislike DELAY() workarounds in general, it's
definitely worth trying to figure out why this is the case.
Tested on: AP93 (AR7240) reference design
Obtained from: Linux OpenWRT
PAE to insta-panic on startup. Remove one unused variable that was
commented out.
Reviewed by: ambrisko@
Obtained from: jhb@ peter@ bz@ and countless others during BSDCAN
MFC after: 3 days
This is designed to support the very basic ethernet switch chip behaviour,
specifically:
* accessing switch register space;
* accessing per-PHY registers (for switches that actually expose PHYs);
* basic vlan group support, which applies for the rtl8366 driver but not
for the atheros switches.
This also includes initial support for:
* rtl8366rb support - which is a 10/100/1000 switch which supports
vlan groups;
* Initial Atheros AR8316 switch support - which is a 10/100/1000 switch
which supports an alternate vlan configuration (so the vlan group
methods are stubbed.)
The general idea here is that the switch driver may speak to a variety of
backend busses (mdio, i2c, spi, whatever) and expose:
* If applicable, one or more MDIO busses which ethernet interfaces can
then attach PHYs to via miiproxy/mdioproxy;
* exposes miibusses, one for each port at the moment, so ..
* .. a PHY can be exposed on each miibus, for each switch port, with all
of the existing MII/ifnet framework.
However:
* The ifnet is manually created for now, and it isn't linked into the
interface list, nor can you (currently) send/receive frames on this ifnet.
At some point in the future there may be _some_ support for this, for
switches with a multi-port, isolated mode.
* I'm still in the process of sorting out correct(er) locking.
TODO:
* ray's switch code in zrouter (zrouter.org) includes a much more developed
newbus API that covers the various switch methods, as well as a
capability API so drivers, the switch layer and the userland utility
can properly control the subset of supported features.
The plan is to sort that out later, once the rest of ray's switch drivers
are brought over and extended to export MII busses and PHYs.
Submitted by: Stefan Bethke <stb@lassitu.de>
Reviewed by: ray
deterministically handled after the corresponding PHY drivers when
loaded as modules. Otherwise, when these MAC/PHY driver pairs are
compiled into a single module probing the PHY driver may fail. This
makes r151438 and r226154 actually work. [1]
Reported and tested by: yongari (fxp(4))
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
Submitted by: jhb [1]
MFC after: 3 days
as possible when using more than one igb(4) adapter. This
means that queues will not be bound to the same CPUs if
there are more CPUs availble.
This is only applicable to a system that has multiple interfaces.
Obtained from: Yahoo! Inc.
MFC after: 3 days
controller to perform MDIO type accesses to a remote transceiver
using message pages defined through MRBE(multirate backplane
ethernet). It's used in blade systems(e.g Dell Blade m610) which
are connected to pass-through blades rather than traditional
switches.
This change directly manipulates firmware's mailboxes to control
remote PHY such that it does not use mii(4). Alternatively, as
David said, it could be implemented in brgphy(4) by creating a fake
PHY and let brgphy(4) do necessary mii accesses and bce(4) can
implement mailbox accesses based on the type of brgphy(4)'s mii
accesses. Personally, I think it would make brgphy(4) hard to
maintain since it would have to access many bce(4) registers in
brgphy(4). Given that there are users who are suffering from lack
of remote PHY support, it would be better to get working system
rather than waiting for complete/perfect implementation.
Tested by: Jan Winter ( jan.winter <> kantarmedia dot de )
Reviewed by: davidch (initial version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
TX and RX PCU stop/drain routines have been thoroughly debugged.
It's also very likely that I should add hooks back up to the
interface glue (if_ath_pci / if_ath_ahb) to do any relevant
bus flushes that are required. A WMAC DDR flush may be required
for the AR9130 SoC.
result in INQUIRY VPD 0x81 to SATA devices to return only 63 bytes of data
instead of 64 during SCSI/ATA translation.
Sponsored by: Intel
Approved by: scottl
MFC after: 1 week
them to cleanup and goto out when acknowledging the LD's. Check
for failure on malloc. Remove a couple of extra lines and remove
the spurious return.
Prompted by: Petr Lampa
MFC after: 3 days
Use MADT to match ACPI Processor objects to CPUs. MADT and DSDT/SSDTs may
list CPUs in different orders, especially for disabled logical cores. Now
we match ACPI IDs from the MADT with Processor objects, strictly order CPUs
accordingly, and ignore disabled cores. This prevents us from executing
methods for other CPUs, e. g., _PSS for disabled logical core, which may not
exist. Unfortunately, it is known that there are a few systems with buggy
BIOSes that do not have unique ACPI IDs for MADT and Processor objects. To
work around these problems, 'debug.acpi.cpu_unordered' tunable is added.
Set this to a non-zero value to restore the old behavior.
Many thanks to jhb for pointing me to the right direction and the manual
page change.
Reported by: Harris, James R (james dot r dot harris at intel dot com)
Tested by: Harris, James R (james dot r dot harris at intel dot com)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 month
list CPUs in different orders, especially for disabled logical cores. Now
we match ACPI IDs from the MADT with Processor objects, strictly order CPUs
accordingly, and ignore disabled cores. This prevents us from executing
methods for other CPUs, e. g., _PSS for disabled logical core, which may not
exist. Unfortunately, it is known that there are a few systems with buggy
BIOSes that do not have unique ACPI IDs for MADT and Processor objects. To
work around these problems
ThunderBolt cannot read sector >= 2^32 or 2^21
with supplied patch.
Second the bigger change, fix RAID operation on ThunderBolt base
card such as physically removing a disk from a RAID and replacing
it. The current situation is the RAID firmware effectively hangs
waiting for an acknowledgement from the driver. This is due to
the firmware support of the driver actually accessing the RAID
from under the firmware. This is an interesting feature that
the FreeBSD driver does not use. However, when the firmare
detects the driver has attached it then expects the driver will
synchronize LD's with the firmware. If the driver does not sync.
then the management part of the firmware will hang waiting for
it so a pulled driver will listed as still there.
The fix for this problem isn't extremely difficult. However,
figuring out why some of the code was the way it was and then
redoing it was involved. Not have a spec. made it harder to
try to figure out. The existing driver would send a
MFI_DCMD_LD_MAP_GET_INFO command in write mode to acknowledge
a LD state change. In read mode it gets the RAID map from the
firmware. The FreeBSD driver doesn't do that currently. It
could be added in the future with the appropriate structures.
To simplify things, get the current LD state and then build
the MFI_DCMD_LD_MAP_GET_INFO/write command so that it sends
an acknowledgement for each LD. The map would probably state
which LD's changed so then the driver could probably just
acknowledge the LD's that changed versus all. This doesn't seem
to be a problem. When a MFI_DCMD_LD_MAP_GET_INFO/write command
is sent to the firmware, it will complete later when a change
to the LD's happen. So it is very much like an AEN command
returning when something happened. When the
MFI_DCMD_LD_MAP_GET_INFO/write command completes, we refire the
sync'ing of the LD state. This needs to be done in as an event
so that MFI_DCMD_LD_GET_LIST can wait for that command to
complete before issuing the MFI_DCMD_LD_MAP_GET_INFO/write.
The prior code didn't use the call-back function and tried
to intercept the MFI_DCMD_LD_MAP_GET_INFO/write command when
processing an interrupt. This added a bunch of code complexity
to the interrupt handler. Using the call-back that is done
for other commands got rid of this need. So the interrupt
handler is greatly simplified. It seems that even commands
that shouldn't be acknowledged end up in the interrupt handler.
To deal with this, code was added to check to see if a command
is in the busy queue or not. This might have contributed to the
interrupt storm happening without MSI enabled on these cards.
Note that MFI_DCMD_LD_MAP_GET_INFO/read returns right away.
It would be interesting to see what other complexity could
be removed from the ThunderBolt driver that really isn't
needed in our mode of operation. Letting the RAID firmware
do all of the I/O to disks is a lot faster since it can
use its caches. It greatly simplifies what the driver has
to do and potential bugs if the driver and firmware are
not in sync.
Simplify the aen_abort/cm_map_abort and put it in the softc
versus in the command structure.
This should get merged to 9 before the driver is merged to
8.
PR: 167226
Submitted by: Petr Lampa
MFC after: 3 days
another process is in open() or stat() for the device node, then
close() from the owning process does not result in cdevsw close
method call. This fixes the pemanent "Device busy" seen.
Changed the sndstat_lock from mutex to sx. This allows to extend
the region covered by the lock, to include the uiomove() call in
sndstat_read() and bufptr increment. This fixes the "panic:
sbuf_put_byte called with finished or corrupt sbuf" seen.
In collaboration with: kib
MFC after: 1 week
entirely of one machdep file lifted from the MALTA port, as well as
a low-level console and tty driver for the gxemul debugging console
device (the emulators stdio). As with many low-level embedded and
hypervisor console devices, it is polled only, so we drive TTY I/O
from a callout; we are perhaps a bit too aware of the MIPS physical
maps in order to attach the console before newbus comes to life.
The sample kernel configuration depends on an MD-based root file
system, which is not provided. However, any 64-bit, big-endian
userspace image (such as one generated for MALTA) should work.
This will hopefully be supplemented by additional device drivers for
gxemul-specific hardware simulations from Juli Mallett. We have
found oldtestmips quite useful for testing and improving aspects of
the MIPS port, so it's worth supporting better in FreeBSD.
Requested by: theraven, jmallett
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
MFC after: 3 weeks
MDIO/MII rendezvous proxy.
* Add an 'mdio' bus, which is the "IO" side of an MII bus (but by design
can be anything which implements the underlying register access API.)
* Add 'miiproxy' and 'mdioproxy', which provides a rendezvous mechanism
for MII busses to appear hanging off arbitrary busses (ie, that aren't
necessarily a traditional looking MII bus.)
MII busses can now hang off anything that implements an mdiobus.
For the AR71xx SoC, there's one MDIO bus but two MII busses. So to
properly support two or more real PHYs, this can be done:
# arge0 MDIO bus - there's no arge1 MDIO bus for AR71xx
hint.argemdio.0.at="nexus0"
hint.argemdio.0.maddr=0x19000000
hint.argemdio.0.msize=0x1000
hint.argemdio.0.order=0
# Create two mdioproxy instances
hint.mdioproxy.0.at="mdio0"
hint.mdioproxy.1.at="mdio0"
# .. and with a follow-up patch
hint.arge.0.mdio=mdioproxy0
hint.arge.1.mdio=mdioproxy0
TODO:
* Do a sweep or two and add appropriate locking in mdio/mdioproxy/miiproxy.
Submitted by: Stefan Bethke <stb@lassitu.de>
Reviewed by: ray
This will give you more bandwidth for isochronous
FULL speed applications connected through a
High Speed HUB.
This patch has been tested with XHCI and EHCI.
MFC after: 1 week
in the HAL. That's very memory hungry (32k just for channel statistics)
which would be better served by keeping a summary in the ANI state.
Or, later, keep a survey history in net80211.
So:
* Migrate the ah_chansurvey array to be a single entry, for the current
channel.
* Change the ioctl interface and ANI code to just reference that.
* Clear the ah_chansurvey array during channel reset, both in the AR5212
and AR5416 reset path.
* Always call ar5416GetListenTime()
* Modify ar5416GetListenTime() to:
+ don't update the ANI state if there isn't any ANI state;
+ don't update the channel survey state if there's no active
channel - just to be paranoid
+ copy the channel survey results into the current sample slot
based on the current channel; then increment the sample counter
and sample history counter.
* Modify ar5416GetMIBCyclesPct() to simply return a HAL_SURVEY_SAMPLE,
rather than a set of percentages. The ANI code wasn't using the
percentages anyway.
TODO:
* Create a new function which fetches the survey results periodically
* .. then modify the ANI code to use the pre-fetched values rather than
fetching them again
* Roll the 11n ext busy function from ar5416_misc.c to update all the
counters, then do the result calculation
* .. then, modify the MIB counter routine to correctly fetch a snapshot -
freeze the counters, fetch the values, then reset the counters.