These are intended for software TX filtering support, where the NIC
decides there has been too many successive failues to a destination
and will filter it.
Although the filtering is done per-destination (via the keycache),
the state and queue is kept per-TID for now. It simplifies the overall
architecture design and locking.
Whilst here, add ATH_TID_UNLOCK_ASSERT().
* Don't treat high percentage failures as "sucessive failures" - high
MCS rates are very picky and will quite happily "fade" from low
to high failure % and back again within a few seconds. If they really
don't work, the aggregate will just plain fail.
* Only sample MCS rates +/- 3 from the current MCS. Sample will back off
quite quickly, so there's no need to sample _all_ MCS rates between
a high MCS rate and MCS0; there may be a lot of them.
* Modify the smoothing rate to be 75% rather than 95% - it's more adaptive
but it comes with a cost of being slightly less stable at times.
A per-node, hysterisis behaviour would be nicer.
I'm not sure where in the deep, distant past I found the AR_PHY_MODE
registers for half/quarter rate mode, but unfortunately that doesn't
seem to work "right" for non-AR9280 chips.
Specifically:
* don't touch AR_PHY_MODE
* set the PLL bits when configuring half/quarter rate
I've verified this on the AR9280 (5ghz fast clock) and the AR5416.
The AR9280 works in both half/quarter rate; the AR5416 unfortunately
only currently works at half rate. It fails to calibrate on quarter rate.
No, this isn't HT/5 and HT/10 support. This is the 11a half/quarter
rate support primarily used by the 4.9GHz and GSM band regulatory
domains.
This is definitely a work in progress.
TODO:
* everything in the last commit;
* lots more interoperability testing with the AR5212 half/quarter rate
support for the relevant chips;
* Do some interop testing on half/quarter rate support between _all_
the 11n chips - AR5416, AR9160, AR9280 (and AR9285/AR9287 when 2GHz
half/quarter rate support is coded up.)
used when running the chips in half/quarter rate.
This sets up some default parameters which are then overridden by the
driver (which manually configures things like slot timing at interface
start time.)
Although this is a copy-and-modify from the AR5212 HAL, I did peek
at the reference HAL and the ath9k driver to see what they did.
Ath9k in particular doesn't hard-code this - instead, their version
of ar5416InitUserSettings() does all of the relevant math.
TODO:
* do the math, not hard code things!
* fix the mac clock calculation for the AR9287; since it runs the
MAC clock at a higher rate, requiring all the duration calculations
to change;
* Do a whole lot more validation for half/quarter rates.
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros, Linux ath9k
Some of the math is a little wrong thanks to clocks in 11a mode running
at 44MHz when in fast clock mode (rather than 40MHz, which the chips
before AR9280 ran 11a in). That'll have to be addressed in a future commit.
This fixes the incorrect slot (and likely ACK/RTS timeout) values
which I see when enabling half/quarter rate support on the AR9280.
The resulting math matches the expected calculated default values.
ath_buf and when forming a non-aggregate frame.
The non-11n setds function is called when TXing aggregate frames (and
yes, I should fix this!) and the non-11n TX aggregation code doesn't clear
the delimiter field. I figure it's nicer to do that.
This had the side effect of clearing HAL_TXDESC_CLRDMASK for a bunch of
frames, meaning they'd end up being potentially filtered if there were
an error. This is fine in the previous world as they'd just be
software retried but now that I'm working on filtered frames, these
descriptors would be endlessly retried until another valid frame would
come along that had CLRDMASK set.
with the correct configuration.
Occasionally an aggregate TX would fail and the first frame would be
retransmitted as a non-AMPDU frame. Since bfs_aggr=1 and bfs_nframes > 1
(from the previous AMPDU attempt), the aggr completion function would be
called and be very confused about what's going on.
Noticed by: Kim <w8hdkim@gmail.com>
PR: kern/171394
Fix the strong signal diversity capability setting - I had totally
messed up the indentation.
Set the default values to match what's in the .ini for now, rather than
what values I had previously gleaned from places. This seems to work
quite well for the early AR5212 NICs I have. Of course, later NICs
have different PHYs and the radar configuration is very card/board
dependent..
Tested:
* ath1: AR5212 mac 5.3 RF5111 phy 4.1
ath1: 2GHz radio: 0x0023; 5GHz radio: 0x0017
This detects 1, 5, 25, 50, 75, 100uS pulses reliably (with no interference.)
However, 10uS pulses don't detect reliably. That may be around the
transition between short and long pulses so some further tuning may
improve things.
up on (at least) the AR5413.
The 30 second summary - if a CRC error frame comes in during PHY error
processing, that CRC bit will be set for all subsequent frames until
a non-CRC error frame is processed.
So to allow for accurate PHY error processing (Radar, and ANI on the AR5212
HAL chips) just tag the frame as being both CRC and PHY - let the driver
decide what to do with it.
PR: kern/169362
some HAL definitions rather than local definitions.
The original source (ath9k) pulled this stuff from the QCA driver and
removed the HAL_* prefix. I'm just restoring the correct order of things.
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros
In fact, bus_dmamem_alloc() happily NULLs the dmat pointer passed in,
before replacing it with its own.
This fixes a MIPS crash when kldload'ing if_ath/if_ath_pci -
bus_dmamap_destroy() was passed in a NULL dmat pointer and was doing
all kinds of very bad things.
Reviewed by: scottl
This is a re-implementation based on the reference carrier code
for the AR5413.
Tested:
* Pulse detection for AR5212 and AR5413, to ensure the
correct behaviour for both chips
PR: kern/170904
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros
The comparison assumes maxFirstepLevel is a count, rather than a maximum
value. The array is 3 entries in size however 'maxFirstepLevel' is 2.
This bug also exists in the AR5212 HAL.
DFS parameters fetched from the HAL.
Check whether the specific chipset supports RADAR reporting before
enabling DFS; or some of the (unset) DFS methods may fail.
Tested:
* AR5210 (correctly didn't enable radar PHY reporting)
* AR5212 (correctly enabled radar PHY reporting w/ the correct default
parameters.)
TODO:
* Now that I have this capability check in place, I could remove the
(empty) DFS methods from AR5210/AR5211.
* Test on AR5416, AR9160, AR9280.
PR: kern/170904
* mfp support;
* 4.9ghz support in the HAL;
* device type - specifically, the bus type and whether it's a HB63
NIC (which requires some subtle chainmask handling differences
in the AR5416 HAL.)
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros