Restructure the way ATA/ATAPI commands are processed, use a common
ata_request structure for both. This centralises the way requests
are handled so locking is much easier to handle.
The driver is now layered much more cleanly to seperate the lowlevel
HW access so it can be tailored to specific controllers without touching
the upper layers. This is needed to support some of the newer
semi-intelligent ATA controllers showing up.
The top level drivers (disk, ATAPI devices) are more or less still
the same with just corrections to use the new interface.
Pull ATA out from under Gaint now that locking can be done in a sane way.
Add support for a the National Geode SC1100. Thanks to Soekris engineering
for sponsoring a Soekris 4801 to make this support.
Fixed alot of small bugs in the chipset code for various chips now
we are around in that corner anyways.
support stripped out and minimally renamed to owi. This driver
attaches to lucent cards only. This is designed to aid in the testing
of fixes to the wi driver for lucent cards. It is supported only as a
module (you cannot compile it into your kernel). You cannot have the
wi driver in your kernel (or loaded as a moudle) to use the owi
module.
I've not connected it to build, as this module is currently for
debugging purposes. This is for developers only at the present time.
If we can't get lucent support fixed by 5.2 code freeze, then we'll
re-evaulate this support level. Please use this to fix the lucent
support in dev/wi. This will be removed from the system when lucent
support has been fixed in dev/wi.
Note to developers: Do not connect this to the build, make it possible
to build into the kernel or otherwise 'integrate' this into system
without checking with me first. This is for debugging purposes only.
If this doesn't work for you, I don't want to hear about it unless you
are fixing the wi driver :-)
gfb_draw if 'flip' is specified. This causes the mouse cut region
to be displayed in reverse color so it is visbile.
- Use the "other" implementation of gfb_cursor for the creator driver,
which doesn't assume there is a hardware cursor. It seems that the
hardware cursor that creator provides doesn't display the character
under the cursor in reverse colors, so the driver does this manually
and uses the hardware cursor for the mouse pointer (which it also works
much better for). This is wedged here because it required less hoops
than accessing the syscons vtb from inside the video driver, which is
needed to read the character and color attributes under the new cursor
position.
These are fixed resolution and operate only in pixel mode so they present
a challenge to syscons (square peg, round hole, etc, etc). The driver
provides a video driver interface for syscons and a separate character
device for X to mmap. Wherever possible the creator's accelarated graphics
functions are used so text mode is very fast.
Based roughly on the openbsd driver.
round the result up to a multiple of 4 bytes so that it will always
be a multiple of the sample size. Also use the actual buffer size
from sc->bufsz instead of the default DS1_BUFFSIZE.
This fixes panics and bad distortion I have seen on Yamaha DS-1
hardware, mainly when playing certain Real Audio media.
Reviewed by: orion (an earlier version of the patch)
first sample in the buffer to be ignored. The bug caused a repetitive
glitch in one of the stereo channels when playing mono sound on
configurations that use the monotostereo16 feeder.
Reviewed by: orion
to intptr_t. This fixes a compiler warning (integer from pointer
without cast) in scvgarndr.c when SC_PIXEL_MODE is defined.
o Define readb() and writeb(). Both are used in scvgarndr.c when,
guess what, SC_PIXEL_MODE is defined.
Both changes are ia64 specific.
Found by: LINT
CB710, CB720, CB1211, CB1225, CB1410 and CB1420
These are likely licensed designed from TI, and the Linux PCMCIA code
treats them as TI chips.
Add comment, but no ID for the 711E1 from O2Micro.
vendors that list the vendor ID in the proper byte order. The second
section is for vendors that get it backwards. The third is for what
appear to be 'random' ones (although 0xcxxx appears to be coherent
enough that maybe somebody else is assigning those numbers).
o AD1980 hook.
o ac97_fix_auxout.
and:
o Associate AC97_MIX_AUXOUT with SOUND_MIXER_OGAIN rather than
SOUND_MIXER_MONITOR.
o Add ac97_fix_tone to remove tone controls from mixer if invalid.
are all bogus, and the cards that don't decode things quite right
often have hundreds of them. This will fix starvation of small dmesg
buffers and allow better debugging to happen. I thought about adding
an override, but there is such a thing as too many knobs. :-)
- Fix up TX speed changes.
- Make mpi-350 cards sort-of work with new firmware. It RXs okay but TXs
only work for about 14 packets then fails to get an interrupt. The
TX watchdog fires. It has been reported that my hack for now doesn't
break cards with the older firmware. It appears my card has lost
the ability to RX or TX at all but other peoples cards work. I assume
it got damaged in tansport.
MFC: 1 week.
count handling of station entries in hostap mode:
Input path:
o driver is now expected to find the node associated with the
sender of a received frame; use ic_bss if none is located
o driver passes the (referenced) node into ieee80211_input for
use within the wlan module and is responsible for cleaning up
on return
o the antenna state is no longer passed up with each frame; this
is now considered driver-private state and drivers are responsible
for keeping it in the driver-private part of a node
Output path:
Revamp output path for management frames to eliminate redundant
locking that causes problems and to correct reference counting
bogosity that occurs when stations are timed out due to inactivity
(in AP mode). On output the refcnt'd node is stashed in the pkthdr's
recvif field (yech) and retrieved by the driver. This eliminates
an unref/ref scenario and related node table unlock/lock due to the
driver looking up the node. This is particularly important when
stations are timed out as this causes a lock order reversal that
can result in a deadlock. As a byproduct we also reduce the overhead
for sending management frames (minimal). Additional fallout from
this is a change to ieee80211_encap to return a refcn't node for
tieing to the outbound frame. Node refcnts are not reclaimed until
after a frame is completely processed (e.g. in the tx interrupt
handler). This is especially important for timed out stations as
this deref will be the final one causing the node entry to be
reclaimed.
Additional semi-related changes:
o replace m_copym use with m_copypacket (optimization)
o add assert to verify ic_bss is never free'd during normal operation
o add comments explaining calling conventions by drivers for frames
going in each direction
o remove extraneous code that "cannot be executed" (e.g. because
pointers may never be null)
quietly discard them; this just permits them to be collected with bpf)
o add a counter for the number of rate control frames discarded when not in
monitor mode
o move the rx "too short" statistic in the stat structure so non-error rx stats
are together (NB: ABI change to apps that collect stats via driver ioctl)
mistakes (this mistake was not an issue because the length is only used to
decide whether or not to allocate a cluster)
o while here, move a beacon length comment to the "right place"
present, and non-zero when it is (or may be) absent. The test
cbb_child_present was backwards. However, typical usage in the tree
would cause it to do the right thing because the card really wasn't
there the OK flag would be turned on.
Also, assume that if any of these bits are turned on we don't have a
card, rather than requiring both of them in the suspend/resume
routines.
Noticed by: cognet
to what is in NetBSD. I have a few cards that tickles this bug, and
this just keeps us from panicing. It doesn't actually fix the problem
(that will happen once I figure out why some cards hate the address
their CIS is mapped to high memory).
A timecounter will be selected when registered if its quality is
not negative and no less than the current timecounters.
Add a sysctl to report all available timecounters and their qualities.
Give the dummy timecounter a solid negative quality of minus a million.
Give the i8254 zero and the ACPI 1000.
The TSC gets 800, unless APM or SMP forces it negative.
Other timecounters default to zero quality and thereby retain current
selection behaviour.
Correctly handle additional disks without BIOS partition tables.
Previously, vinum_scandisk stopped scanning additional disks for
native partitions after any good partition was found. This applies
to all platforms, but was a particular problem on systems without
BIOS partition tables.
Submitted by: harti
the hardware mutex if it is held. Re-add calls to Enable/Clear fixed events.
This is not known to have caused problems. Bug symptoms might have included
instability after an aborted suspend attempt or power/sleep buttons not
being enabled.
CP-168U board. It initializes and attaches in the same way as the
older (but higher performance) C168H. The only difference is the
board ID, which is 0x1681.
PR: kern/53548
Submitted by: regnauld@catpipe.net
MFC after: 1 week
the Palm device and the USB host controller deadlock. The USB host
controller is expecting an early-end-of-transmission packet with 0
data, and the Palm doesn't send one because it's already communicated
the amount of data it's going to send in a header (which ucom/uvisor
are oblivious to). This is the problem that has been known on the
pilot-link lists as the "[Free]BSD USB problem", but not understood.
Submitted by: Nathan J. Williams <nathanw@MIT.EDU>
for partly-aligned operations through /dev/crypto (unlikely)
o add missing case in iov code that never showed up because of the above bug
Submitted by: "Jason L. Wright" <jason@thought.net>
MFC after: 3 days
found only many tv-cards.
We currently use more ore less evil hacks (slow_msp_audio sysctl) to
configure the various variants of these chips in order to have
stereo autodetection work. Nevertheless, this doesn't always work
even though it _should_, according to the specs.
This is, for example, the case for some popular Hauppauge models sold
sold in Germany.
However, the Linux driver always worked for me and others. Looking at
the sourcecode you will find that the linux-driver uses a very much
enhanced approach to program the various msp34xx chipset variants,
which is also found in the specs for these chips.
This is a port of the Linux MSP34xx code, written by Gerd Knorr
<kraxel@bytesex.org>, who agreed to re-release his code under a
BSD license for this port.
A new config option "BKTR_NEW_MSP34XX_DRIVER" is added, which is required
to enable the new driver. Otherwise the old code is used.
The msp34xx.c file is diff-reduced to the linux-driver to make later
modifications easier, thus it doesn't follow style(9) in most cases.
Approved by: roger (committing this, no time to test/review),
keichii (code review)
These are 10/100 only NICs found on the IBM Thinkpad R40E and
G40. These seem to be based on the BCM5705 MAC but with a PHY
that doesn't support 1000Mbps modes.
Submitted by: Igor Sviridov <sia@nest.org>
ioctls.
In the particular case of ptrace(), this commit more-or-less reverts
revision 1.53 of sys_process.c, which appears to have been erroneous.
Reviewed by: iedowse, jhb
to configure this correctly yields many watchdog timeouts even on lightly
loaded machines. This is a common complaint from users with Dell 1750
servers with built-in dual 5704 NICs.
the time the card is inserted and the time that the card is
configured. This can lead to interrupt storms. The O2Micro suggested
workaround is to route the card function interrupt to IRQ1. It
appears from my testing that this is an acceptable workaround for most
chipsets (there's still some issue with the ricoh chipset).
Also, only look at the NOT_A_CARD bit when the bridge tells us there's
a card present. At least one test caused this to be true after the
card was removed, but the author couldn't recreate it with the
workaround in place. The change is more conservative than the
previous code, but still has the work around that wasn't present in
the older code.
BGE_MACSTAT_MI_COMPLETE bit in the MAC status register as a link
change indicator. We turn this bit on now because some of the newer
chips need it, but it usually just means that reading/writing
an MII/GMII register has completed, not that a link change has
occured.
the standard.
1) When the bridge tells us that we have a card that isn't recognized, we
use the force register to force the CV_TEST to run. This test causes the
bridge to re-evaluate the card. Once this re-evaluation process happens,
we get a new interrupt that may say it is ready to process. We try this up
to 20 times. Tests have shown that this appears to correctly reset the
'Unknown card type' problem that I saw on my Sony PCG-505TS.
2) Take a page from OLDCARD and always read the CSC register in the ISR.
Some TI (and it seems maybe Ricoh) chipsets require this to behave
properly. This work around appears to work due to some power management
protocols that were improperly implemented. Maybe it can be removed when
this driver supports the full PME# protocol described in the standards.
3) Minor additional debug printf when debugging is enabled.
4) Minor additional commentary for things that are obvious only after study.
# I'm committing this from my Sony PCG-505TS using shared PCI interrupts
# and NEWCARD, but there are some issues with the Ricoh bridge still, but
# at least now I can boot with the card inserted and have it work.
PCG-505BX (for example) has one of those:
wi0: <Intersil Prism3> mem 0xf8000000-0xf8000fff at device 2.0 on pci2
wi0: 802.11 address: 00:02:8a:94:d8:73
wi0: using RF:PRISM3(Mini-PCI)
wi0: Intersil Firmware: Primary (1.1.1), Station (1.5.6)
wi0: 11b rates: 1Mbps 2Mbps 5.5Mbps 11Mbps
has the same product id, but different vendor id. It also appears
that the MELCO's id should be 0x18a instead of 0x8a01. Fix this.
Submitted by: Shizuka Kudo-san
and up commands. When configuring the interface down only the
connections that are currently closing are deleted from the connection
table. When the interface is configured up, all connections that
are in the table are re-opened.
connections that have been open (and were not closing) when
the interface was stopped. This makes the behaviour of fatm(4) more like
the behaviour of en(4).
completenss. The pessimization is tiny compared with i/o port slowness
except on very old machines, but code that used signed short types for
i/o ports was unpessimized long ago, and the macro that detected it
recently started working for u_short types too. Use of bus space
should have made this moot long ago.
Not tested at runtime by: bde
completenss. The pessimization is tiny compared with i/o port slowness
except on very old machines, but code that used signed short types for
i/o ports was unpessimized long ago, and the macro that detected it
recently started working for u_short types too. Use of bus space
should have made this moot long ago.
Not tested at runtime by: bde
completenss. The pessimization is tiny compared with i/o port slowness
except on very old machines, but code that used signed short types for
i/o ports was unpessimized long ago, and the macro that detected it
recently started working for u_short types too. Use of bus space
should have made this moot long ago.
Not tested at runtime by: bde
- Build SGL's for ATA_PASSTHROUGH commands
- Fallback to using the sgl_offset when the opcode is unknown for building
SGL's/
- Add ioctl calls for adding and removing units.
- Define previously undefined AEN's
- Allocate memory for the ioctl payload in multiples of 512bytes.
MFC after: 1 week
preparation for supporting the OPENVCC and CLOSEVCC ioctls which
are needed for ng_atm. This required some re-organisation of the code
(mostly converting array indexes to pointers). This also gives us
an array of open vccs that will help in using the generic GETVCCS handler.
the macro definition, and cause the generation of syntactically
incorrect code that gcc happens to accept.
Reviewed by: schweikh (mentor)
MFC after: 4 weeks
larger than normal frames, to account for the case where a bge(4) NIC
is used with VLANs. Since we set the IFCAP_VLAN_MTU flag, we must allow
reception of frames up to 1522 bytes in size rather than 1518.
Note that it is possible to work around this bug by doing:
# ifconfig bge0 mtu 1504
prior to configuring any VLAN interfaces.
recompiling the driver. See the comments near the top of "if_em.h"
for descriptions of these delays. Four new loader tunables control
the system-wide default values:
hw.em.tx_int_delay
hw.em.rx_int_delay
hw.em.tx_abs_int_delay
hw.em.rx_abs_int_delay
The tunables are specified in microseconds. The valid range is
0-67108 usec., and 0 means that the timer is disabled.
There are also four new sysctls (actually, a set of four for each
"em" device in the system) to query and change the interrupt delays
after the system is up:
hw.em0.tx_int_delay
hw.em0.rx_int_delay
hw.em0.tx_abs_int_delay (not present for 82542/3/4 adapters)
hw.em0.rx_abs_int_delay (not present for 82542/3/4 adapters)
It seems to be OK to change these values even while the adapter is
passing traffic.
Approved by: Prafulla Deuskar <pdeuskar@FreeBSD.ORG>
MFC after: 4 weeks
- Move isa/ppc* to sys/dev/ppc (repo-copy)
- Add an attachment method to ppc for puc
- In puc we need to walk the chain of parents.
Still to do, is to make ppc(4) & puc(4) work on other platforms. Testers
wanted.
PR: 38372 (in spirit done differently)
Verified by: Make universe (if I messed up a platform please fix)
This is controlled by a per-adapter sysctl hw.atm.hfaX.shape. When
set to 0, no shaping occures. When set to 1 at most 1 channel is
shaped. When set to 2 all CBR channels are shaped. Note, that the
latter may actually not work, because of the adapter supporting
the shaping of only one PDU at the same time.
also do it). Three problems have been encountered:
1. The initialisation command does not work in interrupt mode. Whether
this is a firmware bug or a feature is not clear. The original Fore
drivers execute the initialize command always in polling mode, so
it appears that this behaviour is expected. When we detect a 4.X.Y
firmware do busy wait on the command status.
2. The command code of the GET_PROM command has changed. This is an
unofficial command anyway. What was GET_PROM in 3.X.Y is CLEAR_STATS
in 4.X.Y (although unimplemented in the firmware). We need to
use the correct code depending on the firmware.
3. The 4.X.Y firmware can set the error flag in the command status
without also setting the completion flag (as the documenation says).
Check both variants.
An additional field in the per-card structure fu_ft4 is TRUE when we have
detected a 4.X.Y firmware. Otherwise it is false. The behaviour of the
driver when using a 3.X.Y firmware should be identical to the previous
behaviour.
This change will enable traffic shaping of (at least one) CBR channels.
allocation function. With this patch, it prevents continous growth of
the devbuf memory pool.
Tested with ssh <host> dd of=/dev/null < /dev/zero and vmstat -m | grep devbuf
receive 6 byte commands. Add a check for this flag to da(4) and cd(4) so
that they honor it. This is a quick workaround for many devices (especially
USB) that require da(4) quirks to operate. The more complete approach is
to finish the new transport code which will be aware of the SCSI version a
transport implements.
MFC after: 1 day
function unless the device is configured up. Without this fix, the
device ends up in the RUNNING state even though it is configured down.
Also, check the RUNNING flag before calling the if_start function, in
case the if_init function failed for one reason or another.
contain the filedescriptor number on opens from userland.
The index is used rather than a "struct file *" since it conveys a bit
more information, which may be useful to in particular fdescfs and /dev/fd/*
For now pass -1 all over the place.
newer lucent/hermes firmware than indicated (investigating). I'm committing
this now since it shouldn't hurt anything.
o Vaguely related, add bogus frame length check from netbsd.
Obtained from: netbsd
it attaches to all existing NATM network interfaces in the system
and creates a HARP physical interface for each of them. This allows
us to use the same set of ATM drivers for all ATM stuff. It is
possible to use the same interface for HARP, NATM and netgraph at the
same time.
go looking for free fragments won't match. Since we never free this, we
can "throw away" the tag. This is very dirty, and needs to be reimplemented
properly, but fixes performance problems with uhci.
Also assert that when we overlay a structure on some space, that the
space is large enough for the structure.
namespace. To compensate for it only being used in the !ECDT case, use
a more robust approach to indicate a device was probed via ECDT by setting
the private ivar to be &acpi_ec_devclass. Without the acpi_MatchHid() call
now, it might have been possible for a non-EC device to have had its magic
match our previous flag.
Pointed out by: takawata
to EcGpeQueryHandler on to any waiting threads through the softc. Similar
behavior was in the original version.
Also:
* Merge EcQuery into EcGpeQueryHandler to simplify locking
* Hold EcLock from the initial read of the CSR down to the wakeup or
until after the query command has been processed.
* ec_gpebit only needs to be a UINT8
namespace has been evaluated. Machines with ACPI 2.0 expect this behavior
and have AML which calls EC functions early in the boot process. If the
ECDT is not available, fall back to original probe behavior.
Other minor changes:
* Add GPE bit and GLK usage to the device announcement
* Always use the global lock in the ECDT case, but potentially downgrade to
not using it if _GLK is 0 once the namespace is available. This is
announced with "Changing GLK from 1 to 0"
* Remove the acpi_object_list definitions which were earlier deprecated
Ideas from: takawata