Add routines to trigger a function level reset (FLR) of a PCI-express
device via the PCI-express device control register. This also includes
support routines to wait for pending transactions to complete as well
as calculating the maximum completion timeout permitted by a device.
Change the ppt(4) driver to reset pass through devices before attaching
to a VM during startup and before detaching from a VM during shutdown.
Reviewed by: imp, wblock (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7751
When the I/O MMU is active in bhyve, all PCI devices need valid entries
in the DMAR context tables. The I/O MMU code does a single enumeration
of the available PCI devices during initialization to add all existing
devices to a domain representing the host. The ppt(4) driver then moves
pass through devices in and out of domains for virtual machines as needed.
However, when new PCI devices were added at runtime either via SR-IOV or
HotPlug, the I/O MMU tables were not updated.
This change adds a new set of EVENTHANDLERS that are invoked when PCI
devices are added and deleted. The I/O MMU driver in bhyve installs
handlers for these events which it uses to add and remove devices to
the "host" domain.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7667
Idle page zeroing has been disabled by default on all architectures since
r170816 and has some bugs that make it seemingly unusable. Specifically,
the idle-priority pagezero thread exacerbates contention for the free page
lock, and yields the CPU without releasing it in non-preemptive kernels. The
pagezero thread also does not behave correctly when superpage reservations
are enabled: its target is a function of v_free_count, which includes
reserved-but-free pages, but it is only able to zero pages belonging to the
physical memory allocator.
Reviewed by: alc, imp, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7714
This driver only supports 10Mb Ethernet using PIO (the hardware supports
DMA, but the driver only does PIO). There are not any PCCard adapters
supported by this driver, only ISA cards. In addition, it does not use
bus_space but instead uses bcopy with volatile pointers triggering a
host of warnings. (if_ie.c is one of 3 files always built with
-Wno-error)
Relnotes: yes
This hardware is not present on any modern systems. The driver is quite
hackish (raw inb/outb instead of bus_space, and raw inb/outb to random
I/O ports to enable ACPI since it predated proper ACPI support).
Relnotes: yes
The wl(4) driver supports pre-802.11 PCCard wireless adapters that
are slower than 802.11b. They do not work with any of the 802.11
framework and the driver hasn't been reported to actually work in a
long time.
Relnotes: yes
The si(4) driver supported multiport serial adapters for ISA, EISA, and
PCI buses. This driver does not use bus_space, instead it depends on
direct use of the pointer returned by rman_get_virtual(). It is also
still locked by Giant and calls for patch testing to convert it to use
bus_space were unanswered.
Relnotes: yes
queue.h header file and in the queue.3 manual page that they are O(n)
so should be used only in low-usage paths with short lists (otherwise
an STAILQ or TAILQ should be used).
Reviewed by: kib
alternate TCP stack in other then the closed state (pre-listen/connect).
The idea is that *if* that is supported by the alternate stack, it
is asked if its ok to switch. If it approves the "handoff" then we
allow the switch to happen. Also the fini() function now gets a flag
to tell if you are switching away *or* the tcb is destroyed. The
init() call into the alternate stack is moved to the end so the
tcb is more fully formed before the init transpires.
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: D6790
This is a driver for a pre-ATAPI ISA CD-ROM adapter. As noted in
the manpage, this driver is only useful as a backend to cdcontrol to
play audio CDs since it doesn't use DMA, so its data performance is
"abysmal" (and that was true in the mid 90's).
Previously the loop in PCIIOCGETCONF would terminate as soon as it
found enough matches. Now it will continue iterating through the
PCI device list and only terminate if it finds another matching device
for which it has no room to store a conf structure. This means that
PCI_GETCONF_LAST_DEVICE is reliably returned when the number of
matching devices is equal to the number of slots in the matches
buffer. For example, if a program requests the conf structure for a
single PCI function with a specified domain/bus/slot/function it will
now get PCI_GETCONF_LAST_DEVICE instead of PCI_GETCONF_MORE_DEVS.
While here, simplify the loop conditional a bit more by explicitly
breaking out of the loop if copyout() fails and removing a redundant
i < pci_numdevs check.
Reviewed by: vangyzen, imp
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7445
The PCI_IOV option creates character devices in /dev/iov for each PF
device driver that registers support for creating VFs. By default the
character device is named after the PF device (e.g. /dev/iov/foo0).
This change adds a variant of pci_iov_attach() called pci_iov_attach_name()
that allows the name of the /dev/iov entry to be specified by the
driver.
Reviewed by: rstone
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7400
New design allows to attach multiple consumers to ntb_transport(4) instance.
Previous design obtained from Linux theoretically allowed that, but was not
practically usable (Linux also has only one consumer driver now).
New design allows hardware resources to be split between several consumers.
For example, one BAR can be dedicated for remote memory access, while other
resources can be used for packet transport for virtual Ethernet interface.
And even without resource split, this code allows to specify which consumer
driver should attach the hardware.
From some points this makes the code even closer to Linux one, even though
Linux does not provide the described flexibility.
callout_when(9). See the man page update for the description of the
intended use.
Tested by: pho
Reviewed by: jhb, bjk (man page updates)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
X-Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7137
- Support for the AC3165 and AC8260 chipsets was added by r303322 and r303327.
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7322
f/w for the other devices supported by this driver.
Patch linked in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6967 but not actually
a part of the review.
Obtained from DragonflyBSD.
Submitted by: Kevin Bowling <kev009@kev009.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
The asynchronous I/O changes made previously result in different
behavior out of the box. Previously all AIO requests failed with
ENOSYS / SIGSYS unless aio.ko was explicitly loaded. Now, some AIO
requests complete and others ("unsafe" requests) fail with EOPNOTSUPP.
Reword the introductory paragraph in aio(4) to add a general
description of AIO before describing the vfs.aio.enable_unsafe sysctl.
Remove the ENOSYS error description from aio_fsync(2), aio_read(2),
and aio_write(2) and replace it with a description of EOPNOTSUPP.
Remove the ENOSYS error description from aio_mlock(2).
Log a message to the system log the first time a process requests an
"unsafe" AIO request that fails with EOPNOTSUPP. This is modeled on
the log message used for processes using the legacy pty devices.
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7151