The i++ loop from 1..1000 is too small on very fast machines like
PII 450 MHz. Increasing the loop from 1..100000 lets the machine
access PHY. After this patch it's possible to use a SMC PCI card
on a HP Kayak XA series PC Workstation. Workaround until this fix
was to enable debugging in the driver (#define EPIC_DEBUG 1).
Without that patch you get an undefined state:
while true
do
ifconfig -a | grep status:
done
The status messages flaps between twwo values, but not
"connected".
Obtained from: Ustimenko Semen <semen@iclub.nsu.ru>
tulip_addr_filter() on SIOCSIFFLAGS, and was nuking the IFF_ALLMULTI
on entering tulip_addr_filter(). As a result it was impossible to run
a multicast router on a machine with a "de" interface.
Added autodetection of MMAC Osprey 100 card for
Jan Schmidt <mmedia@rz.uni-greifswald.de>. The MMAC card has an EEPROM
which contains an ASCII string beginning with "MMAC".
Corrected Hauppauge Audio Mux Mute value from 0x01 to 0x04.
Fixed a typo.
Sumitted change:
Added ALPS Tuner Type submitted by Hiroki Mori <mori@infocity.co.jp>
Submitted by: Roger Hardiman and Hiroki Mori <mori@infocity.co.jp>
Addtron appear to have their own VIA Rhine II and RealTek 8139 boards
with custom PCI vendor and device IDs. This commit updates the PCI
vendor and device lists in the vr and rl drivers so that we can probe
the additional devices.
Found by: nosing around the PCI vendor and device code list at:
http://www.halcyon.com/scripts/jboemler/pci/pcicode
AX88140A with power management and magic packet support. Correct the
addresses of the PCI power management registers and add some code to
detect the revision ID of the AX88141 and identify it in the probe
messages.
No other changes are needed since the AX88141 is functionally
identical to the AX88140A.
Now should be able to report speed for cards using NatSemi PHY.
(if you have one please let me know if it works as I
only have the Intel version)
Reviewed by: David Greenman <dg@root.com>
3c905B, the RX and TX reset commands also reset the cyclone chip's internal
PHY, which causes it to restart its autonegotiation session. This takes a
second or two to complete, which makes the interface seem to stop responding
for a few seconds every time you do something that reinitializes it.
Issuing the RX and TX resets on the older 3c905 boomerang adapters doesn't
cause any delay because the boomerang chip requires an external PHY.
This should fix the problem where people doing network installs via 3c905B
cards experience a delay after the interface is first initialized, among
other things.
Submitted by Roger Hardiman.
Added ioctl TVTUNER_GETCHANSET to discover which regions the bktr driver
supports. Submitted by Vsevolod Lobko <seva@alex-ua.com>
Added BT848_GPIO_SET_EN,BT848_GPIO_SET_DATA (and GETs) to allow user land
control of the GPIO pins. This allows a Radio module on the GPIO port
to be controlled. Submitted by Vsevolod Lobko <seva@alex-ua.com>
The kernel option BKTR_GPIO_ACCESS must be used to enable the GPIO ioctls.
Submitted by: Roger Hardiman and Vsevolod Lobko <seva@alex-ua.com>
Improved MSP34xx reset for bt848 Hauppauge boards.
Added detection for Bt848a.
Vsevolod Lobko<seva@sevasoft.alex-ua.com> added more XUSSR channels.
Submitted by: parts from Vsevolod Lobko<seva@sevasoft.alex-ua.com>
Obtained from: parts from OpenBSD
v_caddr_t with extreme prejudice. Here the bogons were originally
the same as for c_caddr_t (half-baked K&R support), but rev.1.95
changed one wrong cast and one harmless cast to 2 wrong casts,
and rev.1.96 only fixed the originally wrong cast.
c_caddr_t with extreme prejudice. Here the original casts to
caddr_t were to support K&R compilers (or missing prototypes),
but the relevant source files require an ANSI compiler.
Auto Detection Mode. This leaves MSP3400C owners still unsupported.
Thanks to Gerd Knorr <kraxel@cs.tu-berlin.de> for providing some early
assistance and sample code in the linux bttv driver.
Nicolas Souchu <nsouch@freebsd.org> ported the msp_read/write/reset
functions to smbus/iicbus.
METEOR_INPUT_DEV2 now selects a composite camera on the SVIDEO port.
For true SVIDEO, use METEOR_INPUT_DEV_SVIDEO.
If you get a monochrome image from the SVIDEO port, you have
seleted the wrong input type.
Tested by: Johan Larsson<gozer@ludd.luth.se>
address, account for cards which report the Texas Instruments PCI vendor ID
in addition to Compaq and Olicom. (I don't actually have a card that
reports the TI vendor/device ID, but it appears that some Racore adapters
work this way, and failing to account for it when we have the ID listed
in the supported devices list is a bug.)
iicbus(4) and smb(4).
User programs are available to retrieve SDRAM and sensor info, contact
the author.
Submitted by: Takanori Watanabe <takawata@shidahara1.planet.sci.kobe-u.ac.jp>
Reviewed by: Mike Smith <msmith@freebsd.org>
of the CRC as the multicast hash table bit, not the lower six bits. Plus
we have to flip on all bits in the table for multicast mode.
Pointed out by: Kazushi SUGYO <k-sugyou@nwsl.mesh.ad.jp>
The previous code just ignored the invalid map register, but this gave
surprising results because of the way pci_map_port() associated the map
register offset supplied with a map entry in the map array.
to look up cookies properly, at least for standard controllers.
Cookies are used so that we don't have to pass around lots of args.
All of the dmainit functions use the unit number so it is essential
that we pass them a cookie with the correct unit number.
This may break working configurations if there are bugs in the
dmainit functions like the ones I just fixed for VIA chipsets.
Broken in: rev 1.4 of ide_pci.c and rev.1.139 of wd.c.
Prefetch/postwrite was enabled for the wrong controller. (VIA
is bitwise big endian and we confused ourself by shifting left
instead of right.)
Extracted from: last set of patches from the author
(john hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>) on 7 Feb 1998
Instead of initializing UDMA mode, we turned it off and made sure that
it stays off by turning on the "UDMA enable by SET FEATURES" disable.
The damage was limited by bugs in cookie lookup, and suitable
initialization by some BIOSes. The cookie list has slaves before
masters, and the unit number is ignored when cookies are looked up,
so cookie lookup always finds cookies for slaves and the bug only
clobbers slaves, so the bug was harmless for common configurations
with no slaves or only non-UDMA slaves. UDMA initialization for
masters actually worked if the BIOS turns on the UDMA mode bit and
turns off the "UDMA enable by SET FEATURES" disable.
- In wb_rxeof(), if the received packet is less than MINCLSIZE bytes,
copy it to an mbuf chain so as to be more frugal in our use of mbuf
clusters.
- The Winbond chip, like the ASIX, wants the 'TX interrupt request'
bit set in the _first_ fragment of a transmitted frame, not the
last. (At least the Winbond manual states this unambiguously; too
bad I wasn't paying attention when I read it the first time.)
- Turn off the transmit threshold mechanism (initialize the threshold
to 0). This effectively puts the chip in 'store and forward' mode
which seems to cut down on transmit errors a little. It may also
reduce transmit performace a bit, but I'm willing to do that if it
means better reliability.
- Normally, the driver allocates an mbuf cluster for each receive
descriptor. This is because we have to be prepared to accomodate up to
1500 bytes (a cluster buffer can hold up to 2K). However, using up a
whole cluster buffer for a tiny packet is a bit of a waste. Also,
it seems to me that sometimes mbufs will linger in the kernel for
a while after being passed out of the driver, which means we might
drain the mbuf cluster pool. The cluster pool is smaller than the
mbuf pool in general, so we do the following: if the packet is less
that MINCLSIZE bytes, then we copy it into a small mbuf chain and
leave the mbuf cluster in place for another go-round. This saves
mbuf clusters in some cases while still allowing them to be used
for heavy traffic exchanges with lots of full-sized frames.
- The transmit descriptor has a bit in the control word which allows
the driver to request that a 'TX OK' interrupt be generated when
a frame has been completed. Sometimes, a frame can be fragmented
across several descriptors. The manual for the real DEC 21140A says
that if this happens, the 'TX interrupt request' bit is only valid
in the descriptor of the last fragment. With the ASIX chip, it seems
the 'TX interrupt request' bit is only valid in the descriptor of
the _first_ fragment. Actually, the manual contains conflicting
information, but I think it's supposed to be the first fragment.
To play it safe, set the bit in both the first and last fragment to
be sure that we get a TX OK interrupt. Without this fix, the driver
can sometimes be late in releasing mbufs from the transmit queue
after transmission.
if option CY_PCI_FASTINTR is configured and mapping the irq to a
fastintr is possible. Unfortunately, this has to be optional because
pci_map_int_right() doesn't handle the INTR_EXCL flag right --
INTR_EXCL is honoured even if the interrupt needs to be non-exclusive
for other devices to work.
using the new pci_map_int_right() variant of pci_map_int(). Fast
interrupts work for PCI devices if and only if they are exclusive.
(The PCI interrupt mux doesn't support fast interrupts and can't
support a mixture of fast and slow interrupts even in principle.)
Don't assume that intrmask_t == unsigned in pci_map_int().
register for the PLX id). Merge the vendor's modification of the 2.2.*
release version into -current for reference. Will be cleaned up in next
commit.
Obtained from: ftp://ftp.cyclades.com/pub/cyclades/cyclom-y/freebsd/3.0/cyy30.tar.gz
performance and reliability a little. There was a condition before
where transmission would stall during periods of heavy traffic
exchange between two hosts. Also set the 'want interrupt' bit in
receive descriptor control words.
on the ASIX AX88140A chip. Update /sys/conf/files, RELNOTES.TXT,
/sys/i388/i386/userconfig.c, sysinstall/devices.c, GENERIC and LINT
accordingly.
For now, the only board that I know of that uses this chip is the
Alfa Inc. GFC2204. (Its predecessor, the GFC2202, was a DEC tulip card.)
Thanks again to Ulf for obtaining the board for me. If anyone runs
across another, please feel free to update the man page and/or the
release notes. (The same applies for the other drivers.)
FreeBSD should now have support for all of the DEC tulip workalike
chipsets currently on the market (Macronix, Lite-On, Winbond, ASIX).
And unless I'm mistaken, it should also have support for all PCI fast
ethernet chipsets in general (except maybe the SMC FEAST chip, which
nobody seems to ever use, including SMC). Now if only we could convince
3Com, Intel or whoever to cough up some documentation for gigabit
ethernet hardware.
Also updated RELNOTEX.TXT to mention that the SVEC PN102TX is supported
by the Macronix driver (assuming you actually have an SVEC PN102TX with
a Macronix chip on it; I tried to order a PN102TX once and got a box
labeled 'Hawking Technology PN102TX' that had a VIA Rhine board inside
it).
and mx_setcfg() so that we can read the internal MII registers on the
MX98713 chip correctly. With these changes, media autoselection now
works correctly on the original 98713. All Macronix chips should now
be properly supported (unless there's a surprise waiting in the 98725).
Thanks to Ulf Zimmermann for providing a 98713 board.
isolated to revision 33 PNIC chips is also present in revision 32 chips.
Cards with rev. 32 chips include the LinkSys LNE100TX and the Matrox
FastNIC 10/100. This accounts for all the cards that I have to test
with.
(I was never able to personally trip the bug on this chip rev, but today
one of the guys in the lab did it with the software they're working on
for their cellular IP project, which uses BPF and promiscuous mode
extensively.)
This commit enables the promiscuous mode software workaround code for
both revison 32 and revision 33 chips. It's possible all of the PNIC
chips suffer from this bug, but these are the only two revs where I
know for a fact it exists.
chip revisions. (A buggy taiwanese chip? I'm just shocked; shocked I tell
you.) So far I have only observed the anomalous behavior on board with
PCI revision 33 chips. At the moment, this seems to include only the
Netgear FA310-TX rev D1 boards with chips labeled NGMC169B. (Possibly this
means it's an 82c169B part from Lite-On.)
The bug only manifests itself in promiscuous mode, and usually only at
10Mbps half-duplex. (I have not observed the problem in full-duplex mode,
and I don't think it ever happens at 100Mbps.) The bug appears to be in
the receiver DMA engine. Normally, the chip is programmed with a linked
list of receiver descriptors, each with a receive buffer capable of holding
a complete full-sized ethernet frame. During periods of heavy traffic
(i.e. ping -c 100 -f 8100 <otherhost>), the receiver will sometimes appear
to upload its entire FIFO memory contents instead of just uploading the
desired received frame. The uploaded data will span several receive
buffers, in spite of the fact that the chip has been told to only use
one descriptor per frame, and appears to consist of previously transmitted
frames with the correct received frame appended to the end.
Unfortunately, there is no way to determine exactly how much data is
uploaded when this happens; the chip doesn't tell you anything except the
size of the desired received frame, and the amount of bogus data varies.
Sometimes, the desired frame is also split across multiple buffers.
The workaround is ugly and nasty. The driver assembles all of the data
from the bogus frames into a single buffer. The receive buffers are always
zeroed out, and we program the chip to always include the receive CRC
at the end of each frame. We therefore know that we can start from the
end of the buffer and scan back until we encounter a non-zero data byte,
and say conclusively that this is the end of the desired frame. We can
then subtract the frame length from this address to determine the real
start of the frame, and copy it into an mbuf and pass it on.
This is kludgy and time consuming, but it's better than dropping frames.
It's not too bad since the problem only happens at 10Mbps.
The workaround is only enabled for chips with PCI revision == 33. The
LinkSys LNE100TX and Matrox FastNIC 10/100 cards use a revision 32 chip
and work fine in promiscuous mode. Netgear support has confirmed that
they "have some previous knowledge of problems in promiscuous mode" but
didn't have a workaround. The people at Lite-On who would be able to
suggest a possible fix are on vacation. So, I decided to implement a
workaround of my own until I hear from them. I suppose this problem made
it through Netgear's QA department since Windows doesn't normally use
promiscuous mode, and if Windows doesn't need the feature than it can't
possibly be important, right? Grrr.
this has a problem with capture but i am not sure if it is related
to the mixer or what else.
But in the meantime, this is ok to listen to mpegs.
I also have a much simpler version of the driver in the works which
reuses a lot more of the existing "pcm" routines. Next year...
they use the same value in the VID register.
PR kern/9137: Matrox Mystique chip name typo error
Submitted by: Alex D. Chen <dhchen@Canvas.dorm7.nccu.edu.tw>
AcerLabs Aladdin-V. It makes the PCI probing work when system booting. I
will try to merge some additional funtion(i.e. wdc1 problem cause tons of
PR appear :<) ASAP if I could.
Remind me if something wrong after committing, thanks!
The Winbond chip always includes the CRC with every received frame,
and I can't find anything in the Winbond manual that indicates you can
program it not to do this.
most of them).
Many thanks to Kevin Van Maren for the work here, Intel for lending us
a 450NX system to work this out on, and several other folks for testing
the patches. See the PR for an extensive discussion of the nature of
the problem and resolution.
PR: kern/8928
Submitted by: Kevin Van Maren <vanmaren@fast.cs.utah.edu>
0x02000000. This error was causing the chip to always include the
ethernet CRC along with every received frame (the driver turns on
PN_NETCFG_NO_RXCRC, but it was frobbing the wrong bit).
const char *. Originally I was going to add casts from const char * to
char * in some of the pci device drivers, but the reality is that the
pci device probes return constant quoted strings.
as a RealTek 8139
if_rlreg.h: use bus_space_read_X() in CSR_READ_X() macros instead of
directly calling inb()/outb() etc...
rl.4 + RELNOTES.TXT: mention that SMC EtherEZ PCI 1211-TX is supported
by the RealTek driver
apparently possible) event that the transmit start routine is
called with and empty if_snd queue, bail out instead of dereferencing
unilitialized transmit list pointers and panicking.
for possible buffer overflow problems. Replaced most sprintf()'s
with snprintf(); for others cases, added terminating NUL bytes where
appropriate, replaced constants like "16" with sizeof(), etc.
These changes include several bug fixes, but most changes are for
maintainability's sake. Any instance where it wasn't "immediately
obvious" that a buffer overflow could not occur was made safer.
Reviewed by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
Reviewed by: Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>
Reviewed by: Mike Spengler <mks@networkcs.com>
during a trek through RCS. The Macronix 98713 and 98713A both have the
same PCI device ID but different revision numbers, and we need to be
able to tell one from the other. The 98715 and 98715A chips have the
same device ID as the 98725 chip but different revision numbers, however
we lump them into the same category except when identifying them during
the PCI probe output.
The main reason we need tell the chips apart is that the Macronix app
notes say you have to write a special magic number into one of the
registers in order to put the chip in normal operating mode. The 98713
requires one magic value, while all the others require a different one.
PCI fast ethernet adapters, plus man pages.
if_pn.c: Netgear FA310TX model D1, LinkSys LNE100TX, Matrox FastNIC 10/100,
various other PNIC devices
if_mx.c: NDC Communications SOHOware SFA100 (Macronix 98713A), various
other boards based on the Macronix 98713, 98713A, 98715, 98715A
and 98725 chips
if_vr.c: D-Link DFE530-TX, other boards based on the VIA Rhine and
Rhine II chips (note: the D-Link and certain other cards
that actually use a Rhine II chip still return the PCI
device ID of the Rhine I. I don't know why, and it doesn't
really matter since the driver treats both chips the same
anyway.)
if_wb.c: Trendware TE100-PCIE and various other cards based on the
Winbond W89C840F chip (the Trendware card is identical to
the sample boards Winbond sent me, so who knows how many
clones there are running around)
All drivers include support for ifmedia, BPF and hardware multicast
filtering.
Also updated GENERIC, LINT, RELNOTES.TXT, userconfig and
sysinstall device list.
I also have a driver for the ASIX AX88140A in the works.
which is either a RealTek 8139 in disguise or a RealTek workalike.
This commit fixes the PCI vendor/device ID for this device
and updates the description string to reflect the actual identity
of the device.
I also changed the transmit encapsulation routine to always to
buffer copies on transmit. We end up doing this 99% of the time
anyway. I also tweaked the code that pads packets out to the minimum
length (60) bytes. I was fixing up the m_pkthdr.len value but not
m_len. I don't think this makes that much difference in the grand
scheme of things, but it makes me feel better.
truncated to 32 bits.
* Change the calling convention of the device mmap entry point to
pass a vm_offset_t instead of an int for the offset allowing
devices with a larger memory map than (1<<32) to be supported
on the alpha (/dev/mem is one such).
These changes are required to allow the X server to mmap the various
I/O regions used for device port and memory access on the alpha.
base register that controls Ultra-DMA, so we need to examine all possible
base registers instead of just giving up at the first empty one.
Also, looking at the source code to the BIOS, I see that they are also
checking for 0xffffffff as an invalid value so do the same. Stefan may like
to clean this up, but at least now I can find my PCI IDE registers.
and increase the tx interrupt threshold to 4. This fixes performance
problems on slower systems.
Also fix a mind-o in the rx ring init routine: I used the TX
constant instead of the RX. This isn't a problem as long as the
rings are the same size, but if they aren't hijinx will ensue.
a vga.
* Fix broken logic in syscons for a failed probe.
* Fix AlphaStation 500/600 so that non-serial consoles are supported.
Submitted by: Thomas Valentino Crimi <tcrimi+@andrew.cmu.edu> (vga bits),
Andrew Gallatin <gallatin@cs.duke.edu> (AS500/AS600)
Revert the transmission packet queueing strategy changes. Clearly I missed
something while debugging this, although I never encountered any problems
on my test machines.
Also make one other minor change: jack up the TX reclaim threshold for
3c90xB adapters in order to stave off 'transmission error: 82' errors.
Document the existence of the tx reclaim register (for inspecting the
current reclaim threshold) in register window 5 (if_xlreg.h).
agressive. With the old code, if a descriptor chain was already on its
way to the chip, xl_start() would try to splice new chains onto the end
of the current chain by stopping the transmitter, modifying the tail
pointer of the current chain to point to the head of the new chain, then
restart the transmitter. The manual says you're allowed to do this and
it works, but I'm not too keen on it anymore.
The new code waits until the eixsting chain has been sent and then
queues the next waiting chain in the 'transmit ok' handler.
Performance still looks good one way or the other.
RealTek 8129/8139 chipset like I've been threatening. Update kernel
configs, userconfig.c, relnotes and sysinstall. No man page yet;
comming soon.
I consider this driver stable enough that I want to give it some
exposure in -current.
fxp_stop is called as the first thing in fxp_init, and if the tx desc
list has junk in it, the system may panic. This bug showed up as a side
effect of the changes in rev 1.56, but has been in the code since the
beginning.
this myself for ages, but wasn't able to get any feedback from the people
that I sent it to for testing.
Guy Helmer <ghelmer@scl.ameslab.gov> has given it a shot (before getting on
a plane, thanks!) and it appears to stop his reproducable page fault panic
in the testing he was able to do.
This is a 100BaseFX board with SC fiber media connectors. I don't actually
have one of these but I've been told it works with the xl driver.
Submitted by: Jason Wright from the openbsd group
Disable DPARCKEN in the DSCOMMAND0 register on the aic7890/91/96/97.
Parity checking is broken for some chip/MB combinations and this
is the work around recommended by Adaptec.
dpt_pci.c:
Remove a superflous '{' that prevented DPT_ALLOW_MEMIO from working.
pcireg.h:
Add a definition for Parity Error Reponse bit in the PCI Space
command register.
routines are necessary to allow the use of certain types of hardware on
the alpha, particularly a Myrinet card.
Submitted by: Andrew Gallatin <gallatin@cs.duke.edu>
memory mapped mode. There are some laptop docking stations with
built-in tlan chips where memory mapped mode doesn't work correctly.
Pointed out by: jmb
the OpenBSD group to fix a problem with the default ifmedia not being
set properly in some cases with a 3c905B, leading to a panic in ifmedia_set().
Also apply a patch to force the transmit start routine to check the
transmitter to make sure it isn't wedged if the outbound tx queue appears
full. This seems to cure some problems with 'watchdog timeout' errors
cropping up in some cases. I tried to do this before by checking for the
IFF_OACTIVE flag on entry to xl_start(), but if the IFF_OACTIVE flag is
set, ether_output() won't even call xl_start(). It should work now.
Lastly, increase the size of the TX queue from 10 descriptors to 16 to
hopefully make it less likely that the TX queue will fill up.
PHYs in tl_attach(). This is mainly to suck away any possible stray
interrupts.
This prevents an intermittent problem on some systems where the adapter
probes correctly but yields a device timeout (and possible subsequent adapter
check) when configured. When I originally tested the driver, I ifconfig'ed
the interface after the system had already been booted and didn't notice
any problems, but when configuring the interface immediately at startup,
it would occasionally timeout and hang, until an adapter check interrupt
came along and reset things again. I'm not exactly sure if this is a
general problem of just something peculiar to this hardware (there are
three devices, including the tlan, all on IRQ 11) but the extra reset
shouldn't hurt anything. (It works fine with my 100Mbps Olicom adapter too.)
Thanks to Mark Taylor from Cybernet (mtaylor@cybernet.com) for allowing
me remote access to a Compaq system for debugging purposes.
changes:
- Cleaned up register access macros so that they work like the XL
driver macros (you can switch from PIO to memory-mapped mode
using a single #define -- default is still memory mapped mode).
The old 'struct overlayed onto the memory mapped register space'
cruft has been removed.
- Improved multicast filter code. The ThunderLAN has four entry
perfect filter table in addition to the 64-bit hash table: we need
one of the perfect filter entries for the station address, but we
can use the other three for multicast filtering. We arrange to put
the first three multicast group addresses in the perfect filter
slots so that commonly joined groups like the all hosts group and
the all routers group can be filtered without using up bits in the
hash table.
Note: in FreeBSD 3.0, multicast groups are stored in a doubly
linked list, however new entries are added at the head of the list
(thereby pushing existing entries down towards the tail). We want
to update the filter starting from the oldest entry to the newest
since the all hosts group is always joined first. This means we
really want to start from the tail of the list, not the head, but
to find the tail we first have to traverse the list all the way to
the end and then add entries working backwards. This is a bit of a
kludge and could be inefficient if the list is long.
- Cleaned up autonegotiation code: tl_autoneg() wasn't always setting
modes correctly.
- Cleaned up ifmedia update and status routines as well.
- Added tl_hardreset() routine to initialize the internal PHY according
to the ThunderLAN manual.
- Did away with the kludge where PHYs were treated as separate logical
interfaces. This didn't really work, especially in the case of the
newer Olicom 2326 adapters which use a Micro Linear ML6692 PHY which
provides only 100Mbps support, relying on the internal PHY for 10Mbps
support (both PHYs share the RJ45 port, with the 6692 doing all the
autonegotiation work). This kludge resulted from my misunderstanding
of the operation of the Compaq Netelligent Dual Port card (the tlan
manual mentions multiple channels, but in a different context; this
got me a little confused). The driver has been reported to work
correctly with the dual port card.
- Added dio_getbit/dio_setbit/dio_read/dio_write functions which carefully
set the ThunderLAN's indirectly accessed internal registers. This makes
the EEPROM reading code more reliable.
Hopefully I won't have to touch this again before 3.0 goes out the door.
I plan to import the 2.2.x version sometime this week.
Approved-by: jkh
insertion point into the start queue looking for entries to remove and
mark them with the 'skip' address, recording the entry furthest from the
insertion point that needs to be removed. We then go through a second
loop starting at the furthest entry to be removed and compress the start
queue. The old algorithm started at (old insert point + 1) and wrapped
through the whole queue which would end up moving the start position in
the queue out from under the nose of the scrip processor.
+ Change some messages about CCB memory allocation
+ Turn a failure to DMA map all of a transaction due to lack of
ISP queue entries into a requeue operation (instead of the
case where it had been treated the same as a DMA too big
operation).
+ put back splsoftvm around bus_dmamap_load calls.
+ cleanup (and fix a glaring bug) in the and of the dma setup
routine. Also, the dma setup routines either return CMD_QUEUED
(for success) or CMD_COMPLETE (for failure) or CMD_EAGAIN
(for requeuing for resource shortage reasons).
full condition or other error which requires us to purge the
controller's start queue of transactions for a particular device.
We were relying on the NCR CCB's program address to cause the
script engine to skip to the next entry in the queue even though
the CCB is freed (and its program address switched to the idle
loop) by this action. We now set the address in the start queue
to be the "skip" function directly.
transmitter is wedged. If so, try to unwedge it, process any descriptors
that might need to be free()d, then proceed.
- Disable the 'background' autonegotiation performed during bootstrap.
What happens currently is that the driver starts an autoneg session,
the sets a timeout in the ifnet structure and returns. Later, when the
timer expires, the watchdog routine calls the autoneg handler to check
the results of the session. The problem with this is that the session
may not complete until some point after we have started to mount NFS
filesystems, which can cause the mounts to fail. This is especially
troublesome if booting with an NFS rootfs: we need the interface up
and running before reaching the mountroot() code.
The default behavior now is to do the autoneg synchronously, i.e. wait
5 seconds for the autoneg to complete before exiting the driver attach
routine. People who want the old behavior can compile the driver with
XL_BACKGROUND_AUTONEG #defined. This has no effect on autoneg sessions
initiated by 'ifconfig xl0 media autoselect.'
This slows the probe down a little, but it's either that or botching
NFS mounts at bootup.
- If xl_setmode_mii() is called and there's an autoneg session in progress,
cancel it, _then_ set the modes.
and use this when masking/unmasking interrupts.
Maintain a mapping from (iopaic number, int pin) tuple to irq number,
and use this when configuring devices and programming the ioapics.
Previous code assumed that irq number was equal to int pin number, and
that the ioapic number was 0.
Don't let an AP enter _cpu_switch before all local apics are initialized.
generating a trap 12 panic. The code blindly assumed that in the event
of a transmit error, the packet that caused the error would still be
at the head of the driver's transmit queue (sc->xl_cdata.xl_tx_head).
However in the case of error 82 (which indicates that a transmit error
occurred after part of the transmit FIFO memory has been reclaimed)
this is not true: the TX queue has already been flushed, and the
pointer to the head of the queue is NULL, so trying to dereference
the pointer to find the transmit descriptor address causes a crash.
The code now checks for a NULL pointer before trying to reload the
chip's download pointer register. There may still be error messages
printed warning of the transmit error, but no panic should occur.
Note that this eror code is only generated with "cyclone" chipsets
(3c900B, 3c905B, and presumeably the 3c980 server adapter). It should
only appear during periods of heavy traffic, probably only on
non-switched networks.
Problem reported by: Darcy Buskermolen <darcy@ok-connect.com>
XCVR value read from the EEPROM is completely wrong. I've had one report
of a 3c900 card that returns an xcvr value of 14, which is impossible
(the manual states that all vales above 8 are reserved). If the value
is out of the expe
Add PCI vendor ID for the 3c980-TX server adapter card, which apparently
also uses the cyclone chip. Graciously supplied Mats O Jansson
<maja@cntw.com>.
Also noted by Mats, the 10mpbs cyclone adapters should be named 3c900B,
not 3c905B. I haven't actually encountered a 10mbps only cyclone adapter
yet, nor anybody who has one, but this makes sense given the naming
scheme used for the older boomerang adapters.
Removed Hauppauge EEPROM 0x10 detection as I think 0x10 should be a
PAL tuner, not NTSC.
Reinstated some Tuner Guesswork code from 1.27
Submitted by: Roger Hardiman <roger@cs.strath.ac.uk>
Added PR kern/7177 for SECAM Video Highway Xtreme with single crystal
PLL configuration submitted by Vsevolod Lobko <seva@alex-ua.com>.
In kernel configuration file add
options OVERRIDE_CARD=2
options OVERRIDE_TUNER=11
options BKTR_USE_PLL
Submitted by: Roger Hardiman <roger@cs.strath.ac.uk>
Normally the full 640x480 (768x576 PAL) image is grabbed. This ioctl
allows a smaller area from anywhere within the video image to be
grabbed, eg a 400x300 image from (50,10).
See restrictions in BT848SCAPAREA.
Submitted by: Roger Hardiman <roger@cs.strath.ac.uk>
cluster from the RX descriptor is passed up to the higher layers and
replaced with an empty buffer for the next time the descriptor comes
up in the RX ring. The xl_newbuf() routine returns ENOBUFS if it can't
obtain a new mbuf cluster, but this return value was being ignored.
Now, if buffer allocation fails, we leave the old one in place and
drop the packet. This is rude, but there's not much else that can be
done in this situation.
Without this, the driver can cause a panic if the system runs out of
MBUF clusters. Now it will complain loudly, but it shouldn't cause a
panic.
Also added another pair of missing newlines to some printf()s.
delay controls how long the driver waits for autonegotiation to
complete after setting the 'autoneg restart bit' in a PHY. In some
cases, it seems 3 seconds is not long enough: with 3c905-TX cards
(external PHY), you sometimes see 'autoneg not complete; no carrier'
errors due to the timeout being too short. (3c905B adapters seem to
be happy with 3 seconds though.)
of associated mbuf clusters) in the RX ring from 4 to 16. On my
really fast PI 400Mhz test machines, 4 descriptors (and associated
mbuf clusters) is enough to achieve decent performance without any
RX overruns. However, one person reported problems with the following
scenario:
- P90 system running FreeBSD with a 3c905B-TX adapter, slow IDE hard
disk (Quantum Bigfoot?)
- PII 266 with SCSI disks running LoseNT and also with a 3c905B-TX
- Both machines connected together via crossover cable at 100Mbps
full-duplex
- LoseNT machine writing largs amounts of data (2.5 GB work of
files each in the neighborhood of 1 to 2 MB in size) via samba to
the FreeBSD machine
In this case, the LoseNT machine is sending data very fast. Apparently
there weren't any problems initially because the user was writing to
one particular disk which was relatively fast, however after this disk
filled up and the user started writing to the second slower disk, RX
overruns would occur and sometimes the RX DMA engine would stall after
a 100 to 500MB had been transfered. The xl_rxeof() handler is supposed
to detect this condition and restart the upload engine; I'm not sure
why it doesn't, unless interrupts are being lost and the rx handler
isn't getting called.
This is still an improvement over the Linux driver, which uses 32
descriptors in its receive ring. :)
Problem reported by: Heiko Schaefer <hschaefer@fto.de>
If I'm reading the manual correctly, the 3c905B actually loses its
PCI configuration during the transition from D3(hot) back to D0, not
during the transition from D0 to D3(hot). This means it should be possible
to save the existing PCI settings, restet the power state, then restore
the PCI settings afterwards. Changed xl_attach() to attempt this first
thing before the normal PCI setup. I'm not certain this will work correctly,
but it shouldn't hurt.
If xl_init() is called while an autoneg session is in progress, the
autoneg timeout and chip state will get clobbered. Try to avoid this
by checking sc->xl_autoneg at the start of xl_init() and defer
the initialization until later if it's set. (xl_init() is always called
at the end of an autoneg session by xl_autoneg_mii().)
Problem pointed out by: Larry Baird <lab@gta.com>
stability now. ALso modify /sys/conf/files, /sys/i386/conf/GENERIC
and /sys/i386/conf/LINT to add entries for the XL driver. Deactivate
support for the XL adapters in the vortex driver. LAstly, add a man
page.
(Also added an MLINKS entry for the ThunderLAN man page which I forgot
previously.)
in ddb) which I broke by changing %8[l]x to %8p. Hacked the central
printf routine to not add an "0x" prefix for %p formats if the field
width is nonzero. The tables are still horribly misformatted on
64-bit machines.
Use %p instead of %8p to print pointers when the field width isn't
important.
interrupts which now defers them until the transmit queue if filled
up with completed buffers. This has two advantages: first, it reduces
the number of transmitter interrupts to just 1/120th of the rate
that they occured previously, and two, running down many buffers
at once has much improved cache effects.
- probe for PHYs by checking the BMSR (phy status) register instead
of the vendor ID register.
- fix the autonegotiation routine so that it figures out the autonegotiated
modes correctly.
- add tweaks to support the Olicom OC-2326 now that I've actually had
a chance to test one
o Olicom appears to encode the ethernet address in the EEPROM
in 16-bit chunks in network byte order. If we detect an
Olicom card (based on the PCI vendor ID), byte-swap the station
address accordingly.
XXX The Linux driver does not do this. I find this odd since
the README from the Linux driver indicates that patches to
support the Olicom cards came from somebody at Olicom; you'd
think if anyone would get that right, it'd be them. Regardless,
I accepted the word of the disgnoatic program that came bundled
with the card as gospel and fixed the attach routine to make
the station address match what it says.
o The version of the 2326 card that I got for testing is a
strange beast: the card does not look like the picture on
the box in which it was packed. For one thing, the picture
shows what looks like an external NS 83840A PHY, but the
actual card doesn't have one. The card has a TNETE100APCM
chip, which appears to have not only the usual internal
tlan 10Mbps PHY at MII address 32, but also a 10/100 PHY
at MII address 0. Curiously, this PHY's vendor and device ID
registers always return 0x0000. I suspect that this is
a mutant version of the ThunderLAN chip with 100Mbps support.
This combination behaves a little strangely and required the
following changes:
- The internal PHY has to be enabled in tl_softreset().
- The internal PHY doesn't seem to come to life after
detecting the 100Mbps PHY unless it's reset twice.
- If you want to use 100Mbps modes, you have to isolate
the internal PHY.
- If you want to use 10Mbps modes, you have to un-isolate
the internal PHY.
The latter two changes are handled at the end of tl_init(): if
the PHY vendor ID is 0x0000 (which should not be possible if we
have a real external PHY), then tl_init() forces the internal
PHY's BMCR register to the proper values.
Change the port address argument to pci_map_port to pci_port_t* which is
defined as u_int on the alpha, u_short on i386. This is a stopgap with a
hopefully limited lifetime.
Discussed with: Stefan Esser <se@freebsd.org>
respectively. Most of the longs should probably have been
u_longs, but this changes is just to prevent warnings about
casts between pointers and integers of different sizes, not
to fix poorly chosen types.
cure the problems I was having with interrupts not being acknowledged
on time. This fixes a problem I observed where starting two ping -f
processes at 10Mbps would cause an adapter check due to TX GO commands
being issued before TXEOC interrupts were being acked.
Also fix a small problem with tl_start(): the mechanism I was using
to queue new packets onto the TX chain was bogus.
Change adapter check handler so that it resets card state after
tl_softreset() is stored.
Moved all EEPROM-related macro definitions into if_tlreg.h.
Don't allow an autoneg session to start until after the TX queue has
been drained, and don't transmit anything until after the autoneg
session is complete.
Also add support for two more Compaq ThunderLAN-based cards, and three
cards from Olicom which also use the ThunderLAN chip. The only thing
different about the Olicom cards is that they store the station address
at a different location within the EEPROM.
hidden). Now "ticks" are used, which are 4 byte, not 8 byte in size.
The size mismatch did not matter due to sufficient padding at the end
of the structure that holds time stamps (there is an unused member).
The fix suggested by Bruce Evans used "sizeof (ticks_t)", but I prefer
to use "sizeof ticks", and didn't seem to object in his last mail on
this topic.
Submitted by: bde
`#if defined(ONE_THING)' is a style bug, and i386 instead of __i386__
is a bug, since i386 is never defined when the kernel is compiled
by with the default flags (`gcc -ansi ...'). Here the bug disabled
the call to pmap_setvidram(), so ISA video memory was not mapped
WC on 686's. The bug may have been masked by bugs in the committer's
version of gcc - `gcc -ansi' incorrectly defines i386 for gcc = the
version of egcs on the 2.2.6 cdrom.
and don't depend on them being declared there. This will cause lots of
warnings for a few minutes until config is updated. Interrupt handlers
should never have been configured by config, and the machine generated
declarations get in the way of changing the arg type from int to void *.
- connector selection values (should fix aui/bnc),
- non-shifting version of crc calculation using a table,
- interrupt mask adjustments,
- add some brackets where a #ifdef could break an if(),
- don't reset the card unless it's up.
work in progress and has never booted a real machine. Initial
development and testing was done using SimOS (see
http://simos.stanford.edu for details). On the SimOS simulator, this
port successfully reaches single-user mode and has been tested with
loads as high as one copy of /bin/ls :-).
Obtained from: partly from NetBSD/alpha
or unsigned int (this doesn't change the struct layout, size or
alignment in any of the files changed in this commit, at least for
gcc on i386's. Using bitfields of type u_char may affect size and
alignment but not packing)).
FreeBSD/alpha. The most significant item is to change the command
argument to ioctl functions from int to u_long. This change brings us
inline with various other BSD versions. Driver writers may like to
use (__FreeBSD_version == 300003) to detect this change.
The prototype FreeBSD/alpha machdep will follow in a couple of days
time.