However, they are presently necessary due to bigger bogusness in the
pci bus layer not doing the right thing on suspend/resume or on
initial device probe. This is exactly the sort of thing that the
BURN_BRIDGES option was invented for. Mark all of them as
BURN_BRIDGES. As soon as I have the powerstate stuff properly
integrated into the pci bus code, I intend to remove all these
workarounds.
Add two new arguments to bus_dma_tag_create(): lockfunc and lockfuncarg.
Lockfunc allows a driver to provide a function for managing its locking
semantics while using busdma. At the moment, this is used for the
asynchronous busdma_swi and callback mechanism. Two lockfunc implementations
are provided: busdma_lock_mutex() performs standard mutex operations on the
mutex that is specified from lockfuncarg. dftl_lock() is a panic
implementation and is defaulted to when NULL, NULL are passed to
bus_dma_tag_create(). The only time that NULL, NULL should ever be used is
when the driver ensures that bus_dmamap_load() will not be deferred.
Drivers that do not provide their own locking can pass
busdma_lock_mutex,&Giant args in order to preserve the former behaviour.
sparc64 and powerpc do not provide real busdma_swi functions, so this is
largely a noop on those platforms. The busdma_swi on is64 is not properly
locked yet, so warnings will be emitted on this platform when busdma
callback deferrals happen.
If anyone gets panics or warnings from dflt_lock() being called, please
let me know right away.
Reviewed by: tmm, gibbs
in the netisr case. This would result in a lock reversal. This
fixes the net.isr.enable=1 case. Better performance might be
obtained by chaining all packets received, dropping the lock, and
then calling if_input() on each one.
Reported by: hmp
structure, which is new to the 82550 and 82551, is used to transmit
a packet. This appears to fix the packet truncation problem that was
observed when using 82550-based fxp cards to transmit ICMP or fragmented
UDP packets of certain lengths which only had one to three bytes in the
second and final mbuf of the packet. This matches a note in the "Intel
8255x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet Controller Family Open Source Software Developer
Manual", which says that the hardware parse bit should be set when sending
these types of packets.
There have also been unconfirmed reports of similar problems when
transmitting TCP packets, which should not be affected by the above
mentioned change because the hardware parse bit was already being set
if the stack requested hardware checksumming of the packet. If the
problem remains, the use of the IPCB structure can be disabled to
cause the driver to fall back to using the older 82559 interface with
82550-based cards by setting
hint.fxp.UNIT_NUMBER.ipcbxmit_disable
to a non-zero value at boot time, or using kenv to set this variable
before using kldload to load the fxp driver.
Approved by: re (jhb)
on if_fxp cards. When flow control is enabled, if the operating system
doesn't acknowledge the packet buffer filling, the card will begin to
generate ethernet quench packets, but appears to get into a feedback
loop of some sort, hosing local switches. This is a temporary workaround
for 5.1: the ability to configure flow control should probably be
exposed by some or another management interface on ethernet link layer
devices.
Approved by: re (bmah)
Reviewed by: mux
by using a __packed keyword for the fxp_rfa structure. The Intel
guys who designed this structure with unaligned fields deserve
to be shot.
Tested by: kris
Approved by: re@ (jhb)
Check for suspend before the device polling, rather than after it.
Check to see if the current thread owns the lock in ioctl and return
EBUSY if it does.
This advances the locking to the point that I can eject my fxp card 10
times in a row, but I agree with Jeff Hsu that we need to get the
network layer locking finished before chasing more of the races here
(actually, he doesn't think this set is worth it even). There's a
number of races between FXP_LOCK in detach and all other users of
FXP_LOCK, and this gets back to the 'device with sleepers being
forcibly detached' problem as well...
1) always call fxp_stop in fxp_detach. Since we don't read from
the card, there's no need to carefully look at things with
bus_child_present.
2) Call FXP_UNLOCK() before calling bus_teardown_intr to avoid
a possible deadlock reported by jhb.
3) add gone to the softc. Set it to true in detach.
4) Return immediately if gone is true in fxp_ioctl
5) Return immediately if gone is true in fxp_intr
- Add fxp_start_body() and change fxp_start() to just acquire locks and
then call fxp_start_body(). Places that would call fxp_start() with
locks held (mutex recursion) now call fxp_start_body() directly.
Remove MTX_RECURSE flag from sc_mtx. [gallatin]
- Change fxp_attach() to work without the softc lock, saving interrupt
hooking until the head of fxp_attach().
- Call ether_ifattach() before overriding ifp parameters. This reverts
part of 1.155.
- Remove multiple error paths in fxp_attach().
- Teardown interrupt in fxp_detach() before unlocking the softc.
- Make sure mutex is not held in fxp_release()
- Delete the miibus instance and/or self in fxp_release(), not in
fxp_detach(). This can happen if attach fails partway through.
- Move ifmedia_removeall to fxp_release() since attach may fail after
media have been allocated.
- Add locking to fxp_suspend, fxp_resume, fxp_start, fxp_intr,
fxp_poll, fxp_tick, fxp_ioctl, fxp_watchdog.
- Pass in ifp to fxp_intr_body since its callers sometimes already use
it.
- Add compatibility define for INTR_MPSAFE for 4.x. [gallatin]
- You don't need to bzero softc.
Ideas from: gallatin, mux
Tested by: >400M packets of dd/ssh, NFS, ping on i386 UP
network layer (ether).
- Don't abuse module names to facilitate ifconfig module loading;
such abuse isn't really needed. (And if we do need type information
associated with a module then we should make it explicit and not
use hacks.)
PCIM_CMD_MEMEN and PCIM_CMD_BUSMASTEREN, becaise some braindead
BIOSes (such as one found in my vprmatrix notebook) forget
to initialize it properly resulting in attachment failure.
- Remove a useless device_is_alive() check.
- Disable interrupts if bus_child_present() so that this
check is more useful.
This fixes the hangs I was seeing when unloading the fxp driver.
Suggestions from: hsu, njl
- Be sure to teardown the interrupt first so that "kldunload if_fxp"
doesn't panic the box. It's now deadlocking rather than crashing,
which isn't really better, but I'm unsure this is fxp(4)'s fault.
- Change a bus_dmamap_sync() call to also do a BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD
now that we can pass several operations.
we're using an atomic operation to clear the suspend flag
in fxp_start(). Since other architectures may need the
same thing, we want to do it all the time and not only
in the __alpha__ case. However, we don't want to use
atomic operations on 16-bit integers, because those may
not be available on any architecture. We're thus faking
a 32-bit atomic operation here. This patch also deals
with endianness here.
which deals with both endianness and alignment issues.
- Collect low-hanging fruits for endianness safety.
- Use 0xffffffff instead of -1 where appropriate.
endian safe.
- Change some u_int to u_int8_t which make more sense here since
we're really defining bytes. That produces the same code due to
how bitfields work.
- Add the definition of the vlan_drop_en bit (not used yet).
- Add some useful comments.
Obtained from: NetBSD
other allocations/initializations have been successful. I kinda
doubt it will fix the recent breakage that some people are seeing,
but this could have caused problems for sure.
This patch is rather big because I had to significantly redesign
the driver to make the busdma conversion possible. Most notably,
hardware and software structures were carefully splitted to get
rid of all the structs overlapping evilness.
Special thanks to phk and Richard Puga <puga@mauibuilt.com> for
providing me with fxp(4) hardware to do this work.
Thanks to marcel for testing this on ia64, and to Fred Clift
<fclift@verio.net> for testing this on alpha.
Tested on: i386, ia64, alpha