- for the legacy PCI ATA channels move channel number out of the device
description, same as it is for ahci(4), siis(4) and mvs(4);
- add device description for the ISA ATA channels.
where the driver assumed that BA resources are still available due to
net80211 saying so.
PR: 161407, 159768
Tested by: cperciva, rene
MFC after: 3 days
As the underlying block is 4KB if the PMC throughput is low the measurement
will be reported on the next tick. pmcstat(8) use the modified flush API to
reclaim current buffer before displaying next top.
MFC after: 1 month
It seems the D_PSEUDO flag was meant to allow make_dev() to return NULL.
Nowadays we have a different interface for that; make_dev_p(). There's
no need to keep it there.
While there, remove an unneeded D_NEEDMINOR from the gpio driver.
Discussed with: gonzo@ (gpio)
Some earlier series (~AR5212?) play badly with BIOSes.
In these instances, they may require a forced reset (by transitioning
the NIC through D0 -> D3 -> D0) before they probe/attach correctly.
This is currently disabled because:
* I haven't figured out the "right" code to ensure this only happens
for PCI NICs (not PCIe or Cardbus);
* I haven't at all done wide scale testing for this, and I'm not yet
ready for said wide-scale testing.
I'm documenting this primarily so users with misbehaving NICs have
something to tinker with.
Obtained from: Atheros
The final missing bit here is enabling the PCI configuration register
read, but there's currently no glue available for the HAL to read (and
write) PCI configuration space registers.
Obtained from: Atheros
The AR5008/AR9001 series NICs have a bug where BB register reads
will occasionally be corrupted. This could cause issues with things
such as ANI, which adjust operational parameters based on the
BB radio register reads. This was introduced in the AR5008 chip
and fixed with the first released AR9002 series NIC (AR9280v2.)
A followup commit will implement the acutal WAR when reading
BB registers. I'm still not sure how I'll implement it - whether
it should be done in the osdep layer, or whether it should just
live in the AR5416 HAL. Either way, they can use this capability
bit to determine whether to implement the WAR or not.
Thankyou to various sources inside Atheros who have helped me track
down what this particular issue is.
Obtained from: Atheros
There are HAL methods which are actually direct register
access, rather than simply HAL calls. Because of this, these
register accesses would use the non-debug path in ah_osdep.h
as opt_ah.h isn't included.
With this, the correct register access methods are used,
so debugging traces show things such as TXDP checking and
TSF32 access.
Because driver is accessing a common MII structure in
mii_pollstat(), updating user supplied structure should be done
before dropping a driver lock.
Reported by: Karim (fodillemlinkarimi <> gmail dot com)
Because driver is accessing a common MII structure in
mii_pollstat(), updating user supplied structure should be done
before dropping a driver lock.
Reported by: Karim (fodillemlinkarimi <> gmail dot com)
That way the radar errors aren't enabled prematurely.
A DFS tester has reported that radar events are reported
during channel scanning, before DFS is actually enabled.
Use the offset into the device tree from fdtp as the phandle instead
of using pointer into the device tree. This will make sure that the
phandle fits into a uint32_t type, even when compiled for 64bit.
Reviewed by: raj, nathanw, marcel
on the largest multi-write size.
From the submitter:
==
I looked further into the magic 88-byte threshold after which the bug
occurs. It turns out that figure included the 24-byte tx_desc, and up
to 64 bytes of beacon frame (header+data).
rum_write_multi doesn't seem happy with writing >64 bytes at a time to
the MAC register. If I break it up into separate calls (e.g. bytes
0-63, then bytes 64-65, written at the appropriate offset) I see the
proper beacon frames being transmitted now.
==
Submitted by: Steven Chamberlain <steven@pyro.eu.org>
MFC after: 3 days
* Break out the PCI setup override code into a new function.
* Re-apply the PCI overrides on powersave resume. The retry timeout
register isn't currently being saved/resumed by the PCI driver/bus
code.
a decoded range for an ACPI Host-PCI bridge, try to allocate it from the
ACPI system resource range. If that works, permit the resource allocation
regardless.
MFC after: 1 week
Check for this case and just return, so that the UCOM unit number zero is
not accidentially freed.
Submitted by: Danish FreeBSD user at EuroBSDcon 2011
MFC after: 3 days
option is defined. This sysctl can be queried by feature_present(3).
Query for this feature in /sbin/atacontrol and /usr/sbin/burncd.
If these utilities detect that ATA_CAM is enabled, then these utilities
will error out. These utilities are compatible with the old ATA
driver, but are incomptible with the new ATA_CAM driver. By erroring out,
we give end-users an idea as to what remedies to use, and reduce the need for them
to file PR's. For atacontrol, camcontrol must be used instead,
and for burncd, alternative utilties from the ports collection must be used
such as sysutils/cdrtools.
In future, maybe someone can re-write burncd to work with ATA_CAM,
but at least for now, we give a somewhat useful error message to end users.
PR: 160979
Reviewed by: jh, Arnaud Lacombe <lacombar at gmail dot com>
Reported by: Joe Barbish <fbsd8 at a1poweruser dot com>
MFC after: 3 days
drivers that only ever attach to a particular MAC driver, i.e. inphy(4),
ruephy(4) and xlphy(4), to the directory where the respective MAC driver
lives and only compile it into the kernel when the latter is also there,
also removing it from miibus.ko and moving it into the module of the
respective MAC driver.
- While at it, rename exphy.c, which comes from NetBSD where the MAC driver
it corresponds to also is named ex(4) instead of xl(4) but that in FreeBSD
actually identifies itself as xlphy(4), and its function names accordingly
for consistency.
- Additionally while at it, fix some minor style issues like whitespace
in the register headers and add multi-inclusion protection to inphyreg.h.
remove explicit checks for BCM5716.
The BCM5709 and BCM5716 chips are virtually indistinguishable by
software except for the PCI device ID. The two chips differ in
that BCM5709 supports TCP/IP and iSCSI offload in Windows while
the BCM5716 doesn't.
While I'm here remove now unused definition of BCE_CHIP_NUM_5716
and BCE_CHIP_ID_5716_C0.
Reported by: sbruno
Reviewed by: davidch
Tested by: davidch
Zero any sense not transferred by the device as the SCSI specification
mandates that any untransferred data should be assumed to be zero.
Reviewed by: ken
* Add the interrupt bit in the configuration register
* Correctly set the counter register for the sampling overflow
interrupt. The interrupt is asserted when bit 31 is set.
So set the overflow value at 0x80000000 and subtract the
programmed value as appropriate.
thanks for their contiued support to FreeBSD.
This is version 10.80.00.003 from codeset 10.2.1 [1]
Obtained from: LSI http://kb.lsi.com/Download16574.aspx [1]
Pre-11n devices and AR5416 use AR_PHY(263) for current RX RSSI.
AR9130 and later have a fourth calibration register (for doing
ADC calibration) and thus the register has moved to AR_PHY(271).
This isn't currently used by any of the active code; I'm committing
this for completeness and in case any third party code attempts to
use it for legacy reasons.
CAM.
Desriptor sense is a new sense data format that originated in SPC-3. Among
other things, it allows for an 8-byte info field, which is necessary to
pass back block numbers larger than 4 bytes.
This change adds a number of new functions to scsi_all.c (and therefore
libcam) that abstract out most access to sense data.
This includes a bump of CAM_VERSION, because the CCB ABI has changed.
Userland programs that use the CAM pass(4) driver will need to be
recompiled.
camcontrol.c: Change uses of scsi_extract_sense() to use
scsi_extract_sense_len().
Use scsi_get_sks() instead of accessing sense key specific
data directly.
scsi_modes: Update the control mode page to the latest version (SPC-4).
scsi_cmds.c,
scsi_target.c: Change references to struct scsi_sense_data to struct
scsi_sense_data_fixed. This should be changed to allow the
user to specify fixed or descriptor sense, and then use
scsi_set_sense_data() to build the sense data.
ps3cdrom.c: Use scsi_set_sense_data() instead of setting sense data
manually.
cam_periph.c: Use scsi_extract_sense_len() instead of using
scsi_extract_sense() or accessing sense data directly.
cam_ccb.h: Bump the CAM_VERSION from 0x15 to 0x16. The change of
struct scsi_sense_data from 32 to 252 bytes changes the
size of struct ccb_scsiio, but not the size of union ccb.
So the version must be bumped to prevent structure
mis-matches.
scsi_all.h: Lots of updated SCSI sense data and other structures.
Add function prototypes for the new sense data functions.
Take out the inline implementation of scsi_extract_sense().
It is now too large to put in a header file.
Add macros to calculate whether fields are present and
filled in fixed and descriptor sense data
scsi_all.c: In scsi_op_desc(), allow the user to pass in NULL inquiry
data, and we'll assume a direct access device in that case.
Changed the SCSI RESERVED sense key name and description
to COMPLETED, as it is now defined in the spec.
Change the error recovery action for a number of read errors
to prevent lots of retries when the drive has said that the
block isn't accessible. This speeds up reconstruction of
the block by any RAID software running on top of the drive
(e.g. ZFS).
In scsi_sense_desc(), allow for invalid sense key numbers.
This allows calling this routine without checking the input
values first.
Change scsi_error_action() to use scsi_extract_sense_len(),
and handle things when invalid asc/ascq values are
encountered.
Add a new routine, scsi_desc_iterate(), that will call the
supplied function for every descriptor in descriptor format
sense data.
Add scsi_set_sense_data(), and scsi_set_sense_data_va(),
which build descriptor and fixed format sense data. They
currently default to fixed format sense data.
Add a number of scsi_get_*() functions, which get different
types of sense data fields from either fixed or descriptor
format sense data, if the data is present.
Add a number of scsi_*_sbuf() functions, which print
formatted versions of various sense data fields. These
functions work for either fixed or descriptor sense.
Add a number of scsi_sense_*_sbuf() functions, which have a
standard calling interface and print the indicated field.
These functions take descriptors only.
Add scsi_sense_desc_sbuf(), which will print a formatted
version of the given sense descriptor.
Pull out a majority of the scsi_sense_sbuf() function and
put it into scsi_sense_only_sbuf(). This allows callers
that don't use struct ccb_scsiio to easily utilize the
printing routines. Revamp that function to handle
descriptor sense and use the new sense fetching and
printing routines.
Move scsi_extract_sense() into scsi_all.c, and implement it
in terms of the new function, scsi_extract_sense_len().
The _len() version takes a length (which should be the
sense length - residual) and can indicate which fields are
present and valid in the sense data.
Add a couple of new scsi_get_*() routines to get the sense
key, asc, and ascq only.
mly.c: Rename struct scsi_sense_data to struct
scsi_sense_data_fixed.
sbp_targ.c: Use the new sense fetching routines to get sense data
instead of accessing it directly.
sbp.c: Change the firewire/SCSI sense data transformation code to
use struct scsi_sense_data_fixed instead of struct
scsi_sense_data. This should be changed later to use
scsi_set_sense_data().
ciss.c: Calculate the sense residual properly. Use
scsi_get_sense_key() to fetch the sense key.
mps_sas.c,
mpt_cam.c: Set the sense residual properly.
iir.c: Use scsi_set_sense_data() instead of building sense data by
hand.
iscsi_subr.c: Use scsi_extract_sense_len() instead of grabbing sense data
directly.
umass.c: Use scsi_set_sense_data() to build sense data.
Grab the sense key using scsi_get_sense_key().
Calculate the sense residual properly.
isp_freebsd.h: Use scsi_get_*() routines to grab asc, ascq, and sense key
values.
Calculate and set the sense residual.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
- Implement bus_adjust_resource() methods as far as necessary and in non-PCI
bridge drivers as far as feasible without rototilling them.
- As NEW_PCIB does a layering violation by activating resources at layers
above pci(4) without previously bubbling up their allocation there, move
the assignment of bus tags and handles from the bus_alloc_resource() to
the bus_activate_resource() methods like at least the other NEW_PCIB
enabled architectures do. This is somewhat unfortunate as previously
sparc64 (ab)used resource activation to indicate whether SYS_RES_MEMORY
resources should be mapped into KVA, which is only necessary if their
going to be accessed via the pointer returned from rman_get_virtual() but
not for bus_space(9) as the later always uses physical access on sparc64.
Besides wasting KVA if we always map in SYS_RES_MEMORY resources, a driver
also may deliberately not map them in if the firmware already has done so,
possibly in a special way. So in order to still allow a driver to decide
whether a SYS_RES_MEMORY resource should be mapped into KVA we let it
indicate that by calling bus_space_map(9) with BUS_SPACE_MAP_LINEAR as
actually documented in the bus_space(9) page. This is implemented by
allocating a separate bus tag per SYS_RES_MEMORY resource and passing the
resource via the previously unused bus tag cookie so we later on can call
rman_set_virtual() in sparc64_bus_mem_map(). As a side effect this now
also allows to actually indicate that a SYS_RES_MEMORY resource should be
mapped in as cacheable and/or read-only via BUS_SPACE_MAP_CACHEABLE and
BUS_SPACE_MAP_READONLY respectively.
- Do some minor cleanup like taking advantage of rman_init_from_resource(),
factor out the common part of bus tag allocation into a newly added
sparc64_alloc_bus_tag(), hook up some missing newbus methods and replace
some homegrown versions with the generic counterparts etc.
- While at it, let apb_attach() (which can't use the generic NEW_PCIB code
as APB bridges just don't have the base and limit registers implemented)
regarding the config space registers cached in pcib_softc and the SYSCTL
reporting nodes set up.
* The AR_ISR_RAC interrupt processing method has a subtle bug in all
the MAC revisions (including pre-11n NICs) until AR9300v2.
If you're unlucky, the clear phase clears an update to one of the
secondary registers, which includes TX status.
This shows up as a "watchdog timeout" if you're doing very low levels
of TX traffic. If you're doing a lot of non-11n TX traffic, you'll
end up receiving a TX interrupt from some later traffic anyway.
But when TX'ing 11n aggregation session traffic (which -HEAD isn't yet
doing), you may find that you're only able to TX one frame (due to
BAW restrictions) and this may end up hitting this race condition.
The only solution is to not use RAC and instead use AR_ISR and the
AR_ISR_Sx registers. The bit in AR_ISR which represents the secondary
registers are not cleared; only the AR_ISR_Sx bits are. This way
any updates which occur between the read and subsequent write will
stay asserted and (correctly) trigger a subsequent interrupt.
I've tested this on the AR5416, AR9160, AR9280. I will soon test
the AR9285 and AR9287.
* The AR_ISR TX and RX bits (and all others!) are set regardless of
whether the contents of the AR_IMR register. So if RX mitigation is
enabled, RXOK is going to be set in AR_ISR and it would normally set
HAL_INT_RX.
Fix the code to not set HAL_INT_RX when RXOK is set and RX mitigation
is compiled in. That way the RX path isn't prematurely called.
I would see:
* An interrupt would come in (eg a beacon, or TX completion) where
RXOK was set but RXINTM/RXMINT wasn't;
* ath_rx_proc() be called - completing RX frames;
* RXINTM/RXMINT would then fire;
* ath_rx_proc() would then be called again but find no frames in the
queue.
This fixes the RX mitigation behaviour to not overly call ath_rx_proc().
* Start to flesh out more correct timer interrupt handling - it isn't
kite/merlin specific. It's actually based on whether autosleep support
is enabled or not.
This is sourced from my 11n TX branch and has been tested for a few weeks.
Finally, the interrupt handling change should likely be implemented
for AR5210, AR5211 and AR5212.
There are some timing concerns which I've yet to fully map out.
In any case, there's an existing software driven mitigation method
for TX interrupts and when TX'ing 11n frames, the whole frame itself
generates an interrupt rather then the subframes.
Although I tried to fix this earlier by introducing HALDEBUG_G(), it
turns out there seem to be other cases where the pointer value is still
NULL.
* Fix DO_HALDEBUG() and the HALDEBUG macro to check whether ah is NULL
before deferencing it
* Remove HALDEBUG_G() as it's no longer needed
This is hopefully a merge candidate for 9.0-RELEASE as enabling
debugging at startup could result in a kernel panic.
by present MegaCLI version. It has some special meaning for the first s/g
list entry, while the main s/g list begins from the the second entry, and
those lists should remain separate after loading to the busdma map.
- Fix bug in 32bit ioctl compatibility shims when s/g list consists of
more then on element.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, inc.
MFC after: 3 days
Import the rest of HID improvements from the branch:
- improve report descriptor parser in libusbhid to handle several kinds of
reports same time;
- add to the libusbhid API two functions wrapping respective kernel IOCTLs
for reading and writing reports;
- tune uhid IOCTL interface to allow reading and writing arbitrary report,
when multiple supported by the device;
- teach usbhidctl to set output and feature reports;
- make usbhidaction support all the same item names as bhidctl.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, inc.
rather than the whole beacon interval.
The reference driver and Linux ath9k both choose 80% of the
beacon interval and they do it in the driver rather than
the HAL (Ath reference) or ath9k_hw (ath9k.)
This quietens stuck beacon conditions on my AR9220/AR9280
based NICs when a lot of burst broadcast/multicast traffic
is going on. It doesn't seem to annoy the earlier MACs as
much as the AR9280 and later one.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k, Atheros
local variable with a beacon interval of 100 TU. This never gets modified
if the beacon interval configuration changes.
This may have been correct in earlier times, but with the advent of
staggered beacons (which default to 1 / ATH_BCBUF beacon interval, so
25 TU here) this value is incorrect.
It is used to configure the default CABQ readytime. So here, the cabq
was being configured to be much greater than the target beacon timer
(TBTT.)
The driver should be configuring a cabq readytime value rather then
leaving it to the HAL to choose sensible defaults. This should be
done in the future - I'm simply trying to ensure sensible defaults
are chosen.
back-end features.
sys/dev/xen/netfront/netfront.c:
o Add xn_query_features() which reads the XenStore and
records the TSO, LRO, and chained ring-request support
of the backend.
o Rename xn_configure_lro() to xn_configure_features() and
use this routine to manage the setup of TSO, LRO, and
checksum offload.
o In create_netdev(), initialize if_capabilities and
if_hwassist to the capabilities found on all backends.
Delegate configuration of if_capenable and the TSO flag
if if_hwassist to xn_configure_features().
Reported by: Hugo Silva (fix inspired by patch provided)
Approved by: re
MFC after: 1 week
PV devices with the ioemu attribute set.
sys/dev/xen/netfront/netfront.c:
o If a mac address for the interface cannot be found
in the front-side XenStore tree, look for an entry
in the back-side tree. With ioemu devices, the
emulator does not populate the front side tree and
neither does Xend.
o Return an error rather than panic when an attach
attempt fails.
Reported by: Janne Snabb (fix inspired by patch provided)
PR: kern/154302
Approved by: re
Sponsored by: BQ Internet
sys/dev/xen/netfront/netfront.c:
o Implement netfront_suspend(), a specialized suspend
handler for the netfront driver. This routine simply
disables the carrier so the driver is idle during
system suspend processing.
o Fix a leak when re-initializing LRO during a link reset.
o In netif_release_tx_bufs(), when cleaning up the grant
references for our TX ring, use gnttab_end_foreign_access_ref
instead of attempting to grant the page again.
o In netif_release_tx_bufs(), we do not track mbufs associated
with mbuf chains, but instead just free each mbuf directly.
Use m_free(), not m_freem(), to avoid double frees of mbufs.
o Refactor some code to enhance clarity.
Approved by: re
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: BQ Internet
sys/dev/xen/blkfront/block.h:
sys/dev/xen/blkfront/blkfront.c:
Remove now unused blkif_vdev_t from the blkfront soft.
sys/dev/xen/blkfront/blkfront.c:
o In blkfront_suspend(), indicate the desire to suspend
by changing the softc connected state to SUSPENDED, and
then wait for any I/O pending on the remote peer to
drain. Cancel suspend processing if I/O does not
drain within 30 seconds.
o Enable and update blkfront_resume(). Since I/O is
drained prior to the suspension of the VM, the complicated
recovery process performed by other Xen blkfront
implementations is avoided. We simply tear down the
connection to our old peer, and then re-connect.
o In blkif_initialize(), fix a resource leak and botched
return if we cannot allocate shadow memory for our
requests.
o In blkfront_backend_changed(), correct our response to
the XenbusStateInitialised state. This state indicates
that our backend peer has published sufficient data for
blkfront to publish ring information and other XenStore
data, not that a connection can occur. Blkfront now
will only perform connection processing in response to
the XenbusStateConnected state. This corrects an issue
where blkfront connected before the backend was ready
during resume processing.
Approved by: re
MFC after: 1 week
framework.
Sponsored by: BQ Internet
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb.c:
o In xenbusb_resume(), publish the state transition of the
resuming device into XenbusStateIntiailising so that the
remote peer can see it. Recording the state locally is
not sufficient to trigger a re-connect sequence.
o In xenbusb_resume(), defer new-bus resume processing until
after the remote peer's XenStore address has been updated.
The drivers may need to refer to this information during
resume processing.
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb_back.c:
sys/xen/xenbus/xenbusb_front.c:
Register xenbusb_resume() rather than bus_generic_resume()
as the handler for device_resume events.
sys/xen/xenstore/xenstore.c:
o Fix grammer in a comment.
o In xs_suspend(), pass suspend events on to the child
devices (e.g. xenbusb_front/back, that are attached
to the XenStore.
Approved by: re
MFC after: 1 week
This change fixes a race in device side mode during clear-stall from
host, which can cause data to be sent too early on the given
endpoint.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
initialization. Prior to this change packets may be transmitted with an
incorrect checksum.
Em(4) already has an equivalent change in r213234.
Obtained From: Sandvine
MFC After: 1 week
Approved by: re (bz)
patch modifies makesyscalls.sh to prefix all of the non-compatibility
calls (e.g. not linux_, freebsd32_) with sys_ and updates the kernel
entry points and all places in the code that use them. It also
fixes an additional name space collision between the kernel function
psignal and the libc function of the same name by renaming the kernel
psignal kern_psignal(). By introducing this change now we will ease future
MFCs that change syscalls.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Approved by: re (bz)
We are allocating some kilobytes of extra memory during USB device enumeration.
This does not change alot under FreeBSD, but makes sense for various embedded
operating systems using the FreeBSD USB stack, which have less memory
resources available.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
the BAR after parsing the CIS. This forces the resource range to be
reallocated if the BAR is reused by the device.
Submitted by: deischen
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: re (kib)
This is another commit in a series of TDMA support fixes for the 11n NICs.
* Move ath_hal_getnexttbtt() into the HAL; write methods for it.
This returns a timer value in TSF, rather than TU.
* Move ath_hal_getcca() and ath_hal_setcca() into the HAL too, where they
likely now belong.
* Create a new HAL capability: HAL_CAP_LONG_RXDESC_TSF.
The pre-11n NICs write 15 bit TSF snapshots into the RX descriptor;
the AR5416 and later write 32 bit TSF snapshots into the RX descriptor.
* Use the new capability to choose between 15 and 31 bit TSF adjustment
functions in ath_extend_tsf().
* Write ar5416GetTsf64() and ar5416SetTsf64() methods.
ar5416GetTsf64() tries to compensate for TSF changes at the 32 bit boundary.
According to yin, this fixes the TDMA beaconing on 11n chipsets and TDMA
stations can now associate/talk, but there are still issues with traffic
stability which need to be investigated.
The ath_hal_extendtsf() function is also used in RX packet timestamping;
this may improve adhoc mode on the 11n chipsets. It also will affect the
timestamps seen in radiotap frames.
Submitted by: Kang Yin Su <cantona@cantona.net>
Approved by: re (kib)
whenever the link state is changed. Using software based polling
for media status tracking is known to cause MII access failure
under certain conditions once link is established so vge(4) used to
rely on link status change interrupt.
However DEVICE_POLLING completely disables generation of all kind
of interrupts on vge(4) such that this resulted in not detecting
link state change event. This means vge(4) does not correctly
detect established/lost link with DEVICE_POLLING. Losing the
interrupt made vge(4) not to send any packets to peer since vge(4)
does not try to send any packets when there is no established link.
Work around the issue by generating link state change interrupt
with DEVICE_POLLING.
PR: kern/160442
Approved by: re (kib)
reference driver does clear the async interrupts after each service.
I'll tinker with this in a future commit.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
When the fast clock (44mhz) is enabled for 5ghz HT20, the
dual ADCs aren't enabled. Trying to do the ADC calibrations
here would result in calibration never completing; this
resulted in IQ calibration never running and thus performance
issues in 11a/11n HT20 mode.
Leave it enabled for non-fastclock (40mhz) 11a mode and
HT40 modes.
This has been fixed in discussion with Felix Fietkau (nbd)
and discussions with the Atheros baseband team.
Linux ath9k now has a similar fix.
Approved by: re (kib)
The current code was rounding down the maximum frame size instead of
routing up, resulting in a read size of 1024 bytes, in the non-jumbo
frame case, and splitting the packets across multiple mbufs.
Consequently the above problem exposed another issue, which is when
packets were splitted across multiple mbufs, and all of the mbufs in the
chain have the M_PKTHDR flag set.
Submitted by: original patch by Ray Ruvinskiy at BlueCoat dot com
Reviewed by: jfv, kmacy, rwatson
Approved by: re (rwatson)
MFC after: 5 days
is retrieved after a failed SCSI command to continue normal
operation. Else this sense information is retrived at the next
SCSI command.
Approved by: re (kib)
Reported by: Alex Kozlov
MFC after: 1 week
PR: usb/160299
which does not support the no synchronize cache SCSI command.
The __FreeBSD_version version macro has been bumped and
external kernel modules needs to be recompiled after
this patch.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
PR: usb/160299
- tjmax - Tj(max) value from the CPU
- delta - current delta reading
- resolution - sensor resolution in Celsius
- throttle_log - whether a #PROCHOT was asserted since last reset
Submitted by: Mark Johnston <markjdb gmail.com> (mostly)
MFC after: 1 month
Approved by: re (kib)
keyboards allow console break sequences (such as ctrl-alt-esc) to be
entered, alternative break can prove useful under virtualisation and
remote console systems where entering control sequences can be
difficult or unreliable.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Approved by: re (bz)
improvements:
(1) Implement new model in previously missed at91 UART driver
(2) Move BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER and ALT_BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER from opt_comconsole.h
to opt_kdb.h (spotted by np)
(3) Garbage collect now-unused opt_comconsole.h
MFC after: 3 weeks
Approved by: re (bz)
accessible:
(1) Always compile in support for breaking into the debugger if options
KDB is present in the kernel.
(2) Disable both by default, but allow them to be enabled via tunables
and sysctls debug.kdb.break_to_debugger and
debug.kdb.alt_break_to_debugger.
(3) options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER and options ALT_BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER continue
to behave as before -- only now instead of compiling in
break-to-debugger support, they change the default values of the
above sysctls to enable those features by default. Current kernel
configurations should, therefore, continue to behave as expected.
(4) Migrate alternative break-to-debugger state machine logic out of
individual device drivers into centralised KDB code. This has a
number of upsides, but also one downside: it's now tricky to release
sio spin locks when entering the debugger, so we don't. However,
similar logic does not exist in other device drivers, including uart.
(5) dcons requires some special handling; unlike other console types, it
allows overriding KDB's own debugger selection, so we need a new
interface to KDB to allow that to work.
GENERIC kernels in -CURRENT will now support break-to-debugger as long as
appropriate boot/run-time options are set, which should improve the
debuggability of BETA kernels significantly.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: kib, nwhitehorn
Approved by: re (bz)
The AR5212 HAL didn't check this field; timers are enabled a different
way.
The AR5416 HAL however did, and since this field was uninitialised, it had
whatever was on the stack at the time. This lead to "unpredictable"
behaviour.
This allows TDMA to work on the AR5416 and later chipsets.
Thanks to: paradyse@gmail.com
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
* Fix SLEEP1/SLEEP2 register definitions; the CAB/Beacon timeout
fields have changed in AR5416 and later
* The TIM_PERIOD and DTIM_PERIOD registers are now microsecond fields,
not TU.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k, Atheros reference
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
or later. Previous hardware had some as TU, some as 1/8th
TU.
* Modify AR_NEXT_DBA and AR_NEXT_SWBA to use a new macro,
ONE_EIGHTH_TU_TO_USEC(), which converts the 1/8th TU
fields to USEC. This is just cosmetic and matches the
Atheros reference driver.
* Fix AR_NEXT_TBTT, which is USEC, not TU.
Submitted by: paradyse@gmail.com
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
programming secret. The PHY would go into sleep state when it
detects no established link and it will re-establish link when the
cable is plugged in. Previously it failed to re-establish link
when the cable is plugged in such that it required to manually down
and up the interface again to make it work. This came from
incorrectly programmed hibernation parameters. According to
Atheros, each PHY chip requires different configuration for
hibernation and different vendor has different settings for the
same chip.
Disabling hibernation may consume more power but establishing link
looks more important than saving power.
Special thanks to Atheros for giving me instructions that disable
hibernation.
MFC after: 1 week
Approved by: re (kib)
isolated but also powered down after a reset and while they just work fine
[sic] when both is the case they don't if they are only deisolate but still
powered down. So in order to put PHYs in an overall normal operation mode
for the common case, ensure in mii_phy_reset() that they are not powered
down after a reset. Unfortunately, this only helps in case of BCM5421,
while BCM5709S apparently only work when they remain isolated and powered
down after a reset. So don't call mii_phy_reset() in brgphy_reset() and
implement the reset locally leaving the problematic bits alone. Effectively
this bypasses r221812 for brgphy(4).
Thanks to Justin Hibbits for doing a binary search in order to identify
the problematic commit.
PR: 157405, 158156
Reviewed by: yongari (mii_phy_reset() part)
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 3 days
cores with temp in the range 101-105 have been found in the past.
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by: delphij, emaste
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 3 days
avoid lost timer interrupts. Previous optimization attempt doing it only
for intervals less then 5000 ticks (~300us) reported to be unreliable by
some people. Probably because of some heavy SMI code on their boards.
Introduce additional safety interval of 128 counter ticks (~9us) between
programmed comparator and counter values to cover different cases of
delayed write found on some chipsets.
Approved by: re (kib)
to implement fchown(2) and fchmod(2) support for several file types
that previously lacked it. Add MAC entries for chown/chmod done on
posix shared memory and (old) in-kernel posix semaphores.
Based on the submission by: glebius
Reviewed by: rwatson
Approved by: re (bz)
mutex, which would lead to a deadlock.
Many thanks to Areca for their continued support of FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Ching Huang <ching2048 areca com tw>
Tested by: Willem Jan Withagen <wjw digiware nl>
MFC after: 3 days
Approved by: re (kib)
We also revive loop down freezes. We also externaliz within isp
isp_prt_endcmd so something outside the core module can print
something about a command completing. Also some work in progress to
assist in handling timed out commands better.
Partially Sponsored by: Panasas
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 month
once. Use taskqueues to do the actual work.
Fix an offset line.
Fix isp_prt so that prints from just one buffer, which makes it
appear cleanly cleanly in logs on SMP systems.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 month
kernel for FreeBSD 9.0:
Add a new capability mask argument to fget(9) and friends, allowing system
call code to declare what capabilities are required when an integer file
descriptor is converted into an in-kernel struct file *. With options
CAPABILITIES compiled into the kernel, this enforces capability
protection; without, this change is effectively a no-op.
Some cases require special handling, such as mmap(2), which must preserve
information about the maximum rights at the time of mapping in the memory
map so that they can later be enforced in mprotect(2) -- this is done by
narrowing the rights in the existing max_protection field used for similar
purposes with file permissions.
In namei(9), we assert that the code is not reached from within capability
mode, as we're not yet ready to enforce namespace capabilities there.
This will follow in a later commit.
Update two capability names: CAP_EVENT and CAP_KEVENT become
CAP_POST_KEVENT and CAP_POLL_KEVENT to more accurately indicate what they
represent.
Approved by: re (bz)
Submitted by: jonathan
Sponsored by: Google Inc
device having the same name like a previous one is not created before the old
one is gone. This fixes some panics due to asserts in the devfs code which
were added recently.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
- Ignore some more internal SAS device status change events.
- Correct inverted Bus and TargetID arguments in a warning.
o Add a warning for MPI_EVENT_SAS_DISCOVERY_ERROR events, which can help
identifying broken disks.
Submitted by: Andrew Boyer
Approved by: re (kib)
Committed from: Chaos Communication Camp 2011
ID. This fixes USB_SET_IMMED call (synchronous operation) of the uhid(4)
driver on devices with single report ID.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
needing this particular modification.
It can be called during ath_dfs_radar_enable() and still achieve the
same functionality, so I am.
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
Remove this debugging, it's not needed anymore and when not enabled,
those variables trigger a compiler warning.
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
Pointy-hat-to: adrian, for not testing a non-debug compile of this code enough
allows it to be overridden at runtime.
Thus, add a function which updates ah_dfsDomain after a channel set
call to ath_hal_set_channels().
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
and the Atheros reference code.
The radar detection code needs to know what the current DFS domain is.
Since net80211 doesn't currently know this information, it's extracted
from the HAL regulatory domain information.
The specifics:
* add a new ath_dfs API hook, ath_dfs_init_radar_filters(), which
updates the radar filters whenever the regulatory domain changes.
* add HAL_DFS_DOMAIN which describes the currently configured DFS domain .
* add a new HAL internal variable which tracks the currently configured
HAL DFS domain.
* add a new HAL capability, HAL_CAP_DFS_DMN, which returns the currently
configured HAL DFS domain setting.
* update the HAL DFS domain setting whenever the channel setting is
updated.
Since this isn't currently used by any radar code, these should all
be no-ops for existing users.
Obtained from: Atheros
Submitted by: KBC Networks, sibridge
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
if 5ghz fast clock is enabled in the current operating mode.
It's slightly dirty, but it's part of the reference HAL and used by
the (currently closed-source) radar event code to map radar pulses
back to microsecond durations.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
the ar9130 code.
Since at least one kernel config specifies individual ath HAL chips
rather than just "device ath_hal" (arm/AVILA), I'm doing this so people
aren't caught out when they update to -HEAD or 9.0 and discover their
ath setup doesn't compile.
I'll revisit this with a proper fix sometime before 9.0-RELEASE.
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
Pointed out by: ray@
Pointy hat to: adrian@
systems, in the same way that AR9130 embedded systems work.
This isn't -everything- that is required - the PCI glue still
needs to be taught about the eepromdata hint, along the same
lines as the AHB glue.
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
Mac with this chipset does not initialize AHCI mode unless it is started
from EFI loader. However, legacy ATA mode works.
Submitted by: jkim@ (original version)
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
truly.
Before 802.11n, the RX descriptor list would employ the "self-linked tail
descriptor" trick which linked the last descriptor back to itself.
This way, the RX engine would never hit the "end" of the list and stop
processing RX (and assert RXEOL) as it never hit a descriptor whose next
pointer was 0. It would just keep overwriting the last descriptor until
the software freed up some more RX descriptors and chained them onto the
end.
For 802.11n, this needs to stop as a self-linked RX descriptor tickles the
block-ack logic into ACK'ing whatever frames are received into that
self-linked descriptor - so in very busy periods, you could end up with
A-MPDU traffic that is ACKed but never received by the 802.11 stack.
This would cause some confusion as the ADDBA windows would suddenly
be out of sync.
So when that occured here, the last descriptor would be hit and the PCU
logic would stop. It would only start again when the RX descriptor list
was updated and the PCU RX engine was re-tickled. That wasn't being done,
so RXEOL would be continuously asserted and no RX would continue.
This patch introduces a new flag - sc->sc_kickpcu - which when set,
signals the RX task to kick the PCU after its processed whatever packets
it can. This way completed packets aren't discarded.
In case some other task gets called which resets the hardware, don't
update sc->sc_imask - instead, just update the hardware interrupt mask
directly and let either ath_rx_proc() or ath_reset() restore the imask
to its former setting.
Note: this bug was only triggered when doing a whole lot of frame snooping
with serial console IO in the RX task. This would defer interrupt processing
enough to cause an RX descriptor overflow. It doesn't happen in normal
conditions.
Approved by: re (kib, blanket)
interrupt storm.
This is easily triggered by flipping on and off tcpdump -y IEEE802_11_RADIO
w/ witness enabled. This causes a whole lot of console IO and when you're
attached to a serial console (eg on my AR7161 embedded board), the RX
interrupt doesn't get called quickly enough and the RX queue fills up.
This wasn't a problem in the past because of the self-linked RX descriptor
trick - the RX would never hit the "end" of the RX descriptor list.
However this isn't possible for 802.11n (see previous commit history for
why.)
Both Linux ath9k and the Atheros reference driver code do this; I'm just
looking now for where they then restart the PCU receive. Right now the RX
will just stop until the interface is reset.
Obtained from: Linux, Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
The AR9280 apparently has an issue with descriptors which straddle a page
boundary (4k). I'm not yet sure whether I should use PAGE_SIZE in the
calculations or whether I should use 4096; the reference code uses 4096.
This patch fiddles with descriptor allocation so a descriptor entry
doesn't straddle a 4kb address boundary. The descriptor memory allocation
is made larger to contain extra descriptors and then the descriptor
address is advanced to the next 4kb boundary where needed.
I've tested this both on Merlin (AR9280) and non-Merlin (in this case,
AR9160.)
Obtained from: Linux, Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
This seems to indicate whether to program the NIC for fractional 5ghz
mode (ie, 5mhz spaced channels, rather than 10 or 20mhz spacing) or not.
The default (0) seems to mean "only program fractional mode if needed".
A different value (eg 1) seems to always enable fractional 5ghz mode
regardless of the frequency.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
Calibration/PCI data that's written to flash (rather than EEPROM attached
to the NIC) is typically already in host-endian. The existing checks
end up swapping 16 bit words incorrectly - the correct solution would be
to read the magic value and determine the EEPROM endianness from that.
(This is what Linux does.)
This doesn't completely enable embedded use of the AR9285/AR9287 -
notably, the EEPROM read methods need to be made generic and available
to all EEPROM drivers. I'll worry about that later.
Approved by: re (kib)
* I messed up the order of parameter true/false; oops!
* AR_PHY_RADAR_1 was being written at the wrong place, and was writing
potential garbage to the hardware.
Approved by: re (kib)
* Teach the AR5212/AR5416 ANI code to use the RX filter methods, rather
than calling the RX filter routines directly.
* Make HAL_ANI_PRESENT and HAL_ANI_MODE unconditionally available,
regardless of whether ah_ani_function is masking it.
* (Mostly) fully disable ANI if interference mitigation is disabled.
When disabled, the ANI code doesn't touch any ANI/PHY registers,
leaving them the default value. This is in line with what the
Atheros reference driver does.
* Correctly set the ANI parameters during ANI reset, rather than
when ANI is enabled. In this way, if ANI is disabled or enabled
whilst the NIC is not active (and there's no current channel),
bogus parameters or a NULL pointer deference doesn't occur.
There's still some lingering issues - notably, the MIB events/interrupts
aren't fully disabled, so MIB interrupts still occur. I'll worry about
that later.
Approved by: re (kib)
This in particular fixes radar PHY handling - on the AR5212
NIC, one enables the AR_PHY_ERR_RADAR bit in AR_PHY_ERR;
the AR5416 and later also needs a bit set in AR_RX_FILTER.
A follow-up commit is needed to convert the AR5416 ANI code
to use this particular method, as it's currently using the
AR5212 methods directly.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
the ADC calibrations if the NIC is in 5ghz 11a or 5ghz HT/20 modes.
I've been told that the dual-ADC is only engaged in turbo/40mhz modes.
Since Sowl (AR9160) seems to return valid-looking calibration data
in 5ghz 20MHz modes, I'm only disabling it for Merlin for now.
It may turn out I can disable it for all chipsets and only enable
it for 40MHz modes.
Approved by: re (kib)
It looks like this was mixed up with the AR9285 calibration code.
This code is now more in line with what Linux ath9k and Atheros
reference drivers do.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
Although this may not be what the original sysctl was designed to do,
it feels a bit more "expected".
Before, if ANI is disabled, the initial ANI parameters are still written
to the hardware, even if they're not enabled. "ANI enabled" would then
adjust the noise immunity parameters dynamically. Disabling ANI would
simply leave the existing noise immunity parameters where they are,
and disable the dynamic part.
The problem is that disabling ANI doesn't leave the hardware in
a consistent, predictable state - so asking a user to disable ANI
wouldn't actually reset the NIC to a consistent set of PHY signal
detection parameters, resulting in an unpredictable/unreliable outcome.
This makes it difficult to get reliable debugging information from
the user.
Approved by: re (kib)
coordinates, such as digitizers and touch-screens, leaving these devices
to uhid(4) and user-level. Specially patched xf86-input-mouse driver can
handle them, that isn't done and can't be done properly with ums(4)
because of mouse(4) protocol limitations.
Approved by: re (kib)
Slot field of the PxCMD register may point to an empty command slot.
That breaks command timeout detection logic, making impossible to find
what command actually caused timeout, and leading to infinite wait.
Workaround that by checking whether pointed command slot is really used
and can timeout in its time. And if not, fallback to the dumb algorithm
used with FBS -- let all commands to time out and then fail all of them.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
the right SIM in case the HBA is RAID-capable but the target in question is
not a hot spare or member of a RAID volume.
- Report the loss and addition of SAS and SATA targets detected via PHY link
status changes and signalled by MPI_EVENT_SAS_DEVICE_STATUS_CHANGE to cam(4)
as lost devices and trigger rescans as appropriate. Without this it can take
quite some time until a lost device actually is no longer tried to be used,
if it ever stops. [1]
- Handle MPI_EVENT_IR2, MPI_EVENT_LOG_ENTRY_ADDED, MPI_EVENT_SAS_DISCOVERY
and MPI_EVENT_SAS_PHY_LINK_STATUS silently as these serve no additional
purpose beyond adding cryptic entries to logs.
Thanks to Hans-Joerg Sirtl for providing one of the HBAs these changes were
developed with and RIP to the mainboard that didn't survive testing them.
PR: 157534 [1]
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Sprinkle some const where appropriate.
- Consistently use target_id_t for the target parameter of mpt_map_physdisk()
and mpt_is_raid_volume().
- Fix some whitespace bugs.
Approved by: re (kib)
accessing SATA registers. Unserialized access under heavy load caused
wrong speed reporting and potentially could cause device loss.
- To free memory and other resources (including above), allocated
during chipinit() method call on attach, add new chipdeinit() method,
called during driver detach.
Submitted by: Andrew Boyer <aboyer@averesystems.com> (initial version)
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
Since no actual radar data is ever handled, this won't
do anything. It's mostly here as a reference for those who
wish to experiment with radar detection.
Approved by: re (kib)
the resource covers the entire range. Some BIOSes appear to mark
endpoints as non-fixed incorrectly (non-fixed endpoints are supposed to
be used in _PRS when OSPM is allowed to allocate a certain chunk of
address space within a larger range, I don't believe it is supposed to be
used for _CRS).
Approved by: re (kib)
ioctl interface for DFS modules to use.
Since there's no open source dfs code yet, this doesn't introduce any
operational changes.
Approved by: re (kib)
tools.
* introduce pe_enabled, which (will) indicate whether the radar
detection stuff is enabled or not. Right now it's incorrectly
set, based on something previously written. I'll sort it out
later.
* Don't set HAL_PHYERR_PARAM_ENABLE in pe_relstep to say whether
radar detection is on.
* Return whether blockradar, fir128 and enmaxrssi is enabled.
* Change some of the phyerr params to be integers rather than
HAL_BOOL so they can be set to the NOPARAM value when the
setup function is called. This is in line with other radar
parameters.
* Add new configuration parameters for fir128, blockradar and
enmaxrssi, rather than defaulting to off, on and on respectively.
Approved by: re (kib)
polluting the AR5416 code with later chipset support.
Note: ar9280InitPLL() supports Merlin (AR9280) and later (AR9285, AR9287.)
Submitted by: ssgriffonuser@gmail.com
Approved by: re (kib)
These should be disabled for the AR5416 in hostap/mesh/ibss mode,
as the AR5416 doesn't have support for radar detection on the
ext channel of a HT40 setup. Later chips do.
Approved by: re (kib)
reference driver.
* Australia should use FCC3_WORLD
* Add some new SKUs; these are just the EEPROM values and haven't been
fully defined yet. As such they won't affect anything.
Obtained from: Atheros
Approved by: re (kib)
unknown reason Apple UniNorth2 gem(4) device required manual
interface down/up operation after r222135. Even though this is not
correct thing and I don't like to revert it but it would be better
than breaking gem(4) on PPC. This should be revisited.
PR: kern/157405
Back in 2009 I changed the ABI of the GIO_KEYMAP and PIO_KEYMAP ioctls
to support wide characters. I created a patch to add ABI compatibility
for the old calls, but I didn't get any feedback to that.
It seems now people are upgrading from 8 to 9 they experience this
issue, so add it anyway.
resource allocation on x86 platforms:
- Add a new helper API that Host-PCI bridge drivers can use to restrict
resource allocation requests to a set of address ranges for different
resource types.
- For the ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver, use Producer address range resources
in _CRS to enumerate valid address ranges for a given Host-PCI bridge.
This can be disabled by including "hostres" in the debug.acpi.disabled
tunable.
- For the MPTable Host-PCI bridge driver, use entries in the extended
MPTable to determine the valid address ranges for a given Host-PCI
bridge. This required adding code to parse extended table entries.
Similar to the new PCI-PCI bridge driver, these changes are only enabled
if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled (which is enabled by default on
amd64 and i386).
Approved by: re (kib)
This was removed accidentally when the per HAL instance
code was added, and not reverted when I added back the
global debug variable (for early chip setup debugging.)
supports IPv4/IPv6 checksum offloading and VLAN tag insertion/
stripping as well as WOL. Because uether does not provide a way
to announce driver specific offload capabilities to upper stack,
checksum offloading support needs more work and will be done in
future.
Special thanks to ASIX for donating sample hardware.
H/W donated by: ASIX Electronics
Reviewed by: hselasky
system timer is stopped during shutdown and that the pause() statement in ukbd
causes infinite hang in this regard. The fix is to use mi_switch() instead of
pause() to do the required task switch to ensure that the required USB processes
get executed.
Reported by: Mike_Karels@mcafee.com
MFC after: 1 week
checking IFF_DRV_RUNNING and simplify the code. This also involves holding
the driver lock in the rx_ch callout.
- Just use ifp instead of sc->sc_ifp.
Submitted by: jhb (mostly)
allowing their use to be disabled via device hints though). This matches
what the corresponding Linux driver provided by LSI does. Tested with
SAS1064.
- There's no need to keep track of the RIDs used.
- Don't allocate MSI/MSI-X as RF_SHAREABLE.
- Remove a comment which no longer applies since r209599.
- Assign NULL rather than 0 to pointers.
MFC after: 1 month
bridge is blacklisted. In that case just return from pci_alloc_msix_method(),
otherwise we continue without a single MSI-X resource, causing subsequent
attempts to use the seemingly available resource to fail or when booting
verbose a NULL-pointer dereference of rle->start when trying to print the
IRQ in pci_alloc_msix_method().
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
- Consistently use the newly introduced sc_mac_rxcfg throughout the driver
instead of reading the old content of CAS_MAC_RX_CONF.
- Increment if_iqdrops instead of if_ierrors in case of RX buffer allocation
failure.
- According to the Cassini datasheet the RX MAC should also be disabled in
cas_setladrf() before changing its configuration.
- Add error messages to gem_disable_{r,t}x() and take advantage of these
throughout the driver instead of duplicating their functionality all over
the place.
sets GEM_MAC_RX_CONFIG based on sc_mac_rxcfg which in turn is initialized
to zero, before reading the supposedly default configuration we were
effectively not basing sc_mac_rxcfg and thus GEM_MAC_RX_CONFIG on the
default configuration. Solve this by calling gem_setladrf() after reading
in the default configuration of GEM_MAC_RX_CONFIG. This also avoids the
need to distinguish whether gem_setladrf() should enable the RX MAC again
and should be slightly more correct as we're now doing all of the RX MAC
configuration in the intended step.
mask of CPUs, pc_other_cpus and pc_cpumask become highly inefficient.
Remove them and replace their usage with custom pc_cpuid magic (as,
atm, pc_cpumask can be easilly represented by (1 << pc_cpuid) and
pc_other_cpus by (all_cpus & ~(1 << pc_cpuid))).
This change is not targeted for MFC because of struct pcpu members
removal and dependency by cpumask_t retirement.
MD review by: marcel, marius, alc
Tested by: pluknet
MD testing by: marcel, marius, gonzo, andreast
setting (either default or if supported as set by SIOCSIFFIB, e.g.
from ifconfig).
Submitted by: Alexander V. Chernikov (melifaro ipfw.ru)
Reviewed by: julian
MFC after: 2 weeks
em drivers.
- Make the per-instance 'enable_aim' sysctl truly per-instance by having it
change a per-instance variable (which is used to control AIM) rather
than having all of the per-instance sysctls operate on a single global
variable.
Reviewed by: jfv (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
the AP doesn't transmit beacons.
If the AP requests a CSA (ie, a channel switch) and then enters CAC
(channel availability check) for 60 seconds, it doesn't send beacons
and it just listens for radar events (and other things which we don't
do yet.)
Now, ath_newstate() was not resetting the beacon timer config on
a transition to the RUN state when in STA mode - it was setting
sc_syncbeacon, which simply updates the beacon config from the
contents of the next received beacon.
This means the STA never generates beacon miss events.
If the AP goes into CAC for 60 seconds and recovers, the STA will
happily receive the first beacon and reconfigure timers.
But if it gets a radar event after that, it'll change channel
again, not notify the station that it's changed channel..
and since the station is happily waiting for the first beacon
to configure the beacon timer details from, it won't ever
generate a beacon miss interrupt and it'll sit there forever
(or until the AP appears on that channel once again.)
This change forces the last known beacon timer config to be
written to hardware on a transition from CSA->RUN in STA mode.
This forces bmiss events to occur and the STA will eventually
(after a handful of beacon miss events) begin scanning for
another access point.
get it out of a stuck condition that can be caused by GEM_MAC_RX_OVERFLOW.
- In gem_reset_rxdma() call gem_setladrf() in order to reprogram the RX
filter and restore the previous content of GEM_MAC_RX_CONFIG. While at it
consistently use the newly introduced sc_mac_rxcfg throughout the driver
instead of reading the its old content.
- Increment if_iqdrops instead of if_ierrors in case of RX buffer allocation
failure.
- According to the GEM datasheet the RX MAC should also be disabled in
gem_setladrf() before changing its configuration.
- Add error messages to gem_disable_{r,t}x() and take advantage of these
throughout the driver instead of duplicating their functionality all over
the place.
In joint forces with: yongari
the microcode caused SCB timeouts. Linux driver does not allow
microcode loading for these controllers and jfv also confirmed that
there is no need to do and it shouldn't.
PR: kern/103332
Additional confirmation from: jfv
MFC after: 1 week
The DFS code was tickling the channel set directly whilst going
through the state RUN -> CSA -> RUN. This only changed the channel;
it didn't go via ath_reset(). However in this driver, a channel
change always causes a chip reset, which resets the beacon timer
configuration and interrupt setup. This meant that data would go
out but as the beacon timers never fired, beacons would never
be queued.
The confusing part is that sometimes the state transition was
RUN -> SCAN -> CAC -> RUN (with CSA being in there sometimes);
going via SCAN would clear sc_beacons and thus the transition
to RUN would reprogram beacon transmission.
In case someone tries debugging why suspending a device currently
beaconing (versus just RX'ing beacons which is what occurs in STA
mode), add a silly comment which should hopefully land them at
this commit message. The call to ath_hal_reset() will be clearing
the beacon config and it may not be always reset.
can be tested.
This doesn't at all actually do radar detection! It's just
so developers who wish to test the net80211 DFS code can easily
do so. Without this flag, the DFS channels are never marked
DFS and thus the DFS stuff doesn't run.
latter.
It appears that the addition to uath(4) came in through PR kern/135009,
which had tested another device, the SMCWUSBTG2, successfully with uath(4)
and included the SMCWUSBG as it "has the same chipset". I can find no
other evidence that these two do actually share the same chipset. Moreover,
Linux treats the SMCWUSBG as a zyd(4) device also.
This reverts r223537.
Discussed with: hselasky, kevlo
MFC after: 1 week
LED controller used to run the load graph on the server's front panel.
Reported by: Paul Mather <paul at gromit dot dlib dot vt dot edu>
MFC after: 3 days
dynamically loaded device drivers get a chance to run their event hooks.
- Decouple the USB suspend and resume lock from witness. It produces some
false warnings due to reusing the lock name among multiple devices.
MFC after: 3 days
is now required by bus_autoconf.
- Allow interface class matching even if device class is vendor specific.
- Update bus_autoconf tool to not generate system and subsystem match lines
for the nomatch event.
PR: misc/157903
MFC after: 14 days
sorted according to the mode which they support:
host, device or dual mode
- Add generic tool to extract these data:
tools/bus_autoconf
Discussed with: imp
Suggested by: Robert Millan <rmh@debian.org>
PR: misc/157903
MFC after: 14 days