18 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
peter
d6f4bd18f5 Use COMPAT_PCI_DRIVER() for registration if it exists. This shouldn't
hurt the driver portability to 3.x too much for where drivers are shared.
1999-04-24 20:17:05 +00:00
peter
087d4857e5 Bring the 'new-bus' to the i386. This extensively changes the way the
i386 platform boots, it is no longer ISA-centric, and is fully dynamic.
Most old drivers compile and run without modification via 'compatability
shims' to enable a smoother transition.  eisa, isapnp and pccard* are
not yet using the new resource manager.  Once fully converted, all drivers
will be loadable, including PCI and ISA.

(Some other changes appear to have snuck in, including a port of Soren's
 ATA driver to the Alpha.  Soren, back this out if you need to.)

This is a checkpoint of work-in-progress, but is quite functional.

The bulk of the work was done over the last few years by Doug Rabson and
Garrett Wollman.

Approved by:	core
1999-04-16 21:22:55 +00:00
wpaul
831605e7ee Grrr. Make all modes work properly with the 82c168 chip and built-in
transceiver. Note in the manual page that autoselection doesn't
work on the 82c168 because the built-in NWAY support is horribly
broken. Manual mode selection works fine, but autoneg is broken for
everything except maybe 10Mbps half-duplex. There's no simple way
to fix this at the moment, so I have to settle for documenting the
bug for now. Fortunately, there aren't anywhere near as many 82c168
boards around as there are 82c169s.
1999-04-14 19:40:08 +00:00
wpaul
f15ffb14c6 Some more fixes:
- It turns out that the 'promiscuous mode' bug what I discovered with the
  PNIC is not restricted to promiscuous mode. I've been doing some remote
  debugging for someone with a P75 system, and at 100Mbps, the receiver
  screws up even when the NIC is in normal mode. Thus, enable the workaround
  for this bug all the time. Note that the workaround is still not enabled
  for the PNIC II, since I haven't tested one yet.

- Set the 'arbitration' bit in the bus configuration register and set the
  maximum burst size to 16 longwords. This seems to fix problems with
  transmit corruption on the P75 system mentioned above. (It probably hurts
  performance a bit too, but I've given up trying to make the PNIC perform
  well.)
1999-04-13 17:29:55 +00:00
wpaul
ff64f7f159 Grr... don't touch the PN_GEN (general purpose) register in pn_setcfg()
unless this is a NIC without an MII-based PHY (i.e. an older LinkSys
LNE100TX).
1999-04-12 21:13:12 +00:00
wpaul
3b411891b9 Minor tweak: move initialiation of busctl register to before setting of
the cache alignment bits.
1999-04-12 02:47:20 +00:00
wpaul
16aba24e8f Enable the promiscuous mode workaround for the PNIC 82c168 chip, which
appears to need it.
1999-04-11 05:15:26 +00:00
wpaul
4c3f741f0c Finally add support for the older 82c168 PNIC chip with the built-in
transceiver. Thanks to Brian Walenze for donating a NIC with this chip
on it (LinkSys didn't really sell that many of them and they're not
in production anymore). The driver now distinguishes between the
82c168 and 82c169 when probing. If no MII transceiver is detected,
it switches over to using the internal one.
1999-04-10 18:44:53 +00:00
wpaul
3b6be56d90 Fix a line wrap bogon. 1999-03-30 19:33:47 +00:00
wpaul
fa78fd775b Make the xl and pn drivers work on FreeBSD/alpha and add them to
sys/alpha/conf/GENERIC.

Note: the PNIC ignores the lower few bits of the RX buffer DMA address,
which means we have to add yet another kludge to make it happy. Since
we can't offset the packet data, we copy the first few bytes of the
received data into a separate mbuf with proper alignment. This puts
the IP header where it needs to be to prevent unaligned accesses.

Also modified the PNIC driver to use a non-interrupt driven TX
strategy. This improves performance somewhat on x86/SMP systems where
interrupt delivery doesn't seem to be as fast with an SMP kernel as
with a UP kernel.
1999-03-27 20:41:25 +00:00
wpaul
ba05d8de99 Add PCI device ID for the PNIC II. 1999-02-26 07:50:53 +00:00
wpaul
cd925e9a35 Remember to initialize ifp->if_snd.ifq_maxlen. 1999-02-01 21:25:52 +00:00
wpaul
169d9aa405 GRRRR! Apparently, the promiscuous mode chip bug which I thought was
isolated to revision 33 PNIC chips is also present in revision 32 chips.
Cards with rev. 32 chips include the LinkSys LNE100TX and the Matrox
FastNIC 10/100. This accounts for all the cards that I have to test
with.

(I was never able to personally trip the bug on this chip rev, but today
one of the guys in the lab did it with the software they're working on
for their cellular IP project, which uses BPF and promiscuous mode
extensively.)

This commit enables the promiscuous mode software workaround code for
both revison 32 and revision 33 chips. It's possible all of the PNIC
chips suffer from this bug, but these are the only two revs where I
know for a fact it exists.
1999-01-05 00:59:08 +00:00
wpaul
ef9b43fe9a This commit adds a software workaround for a hardware bug in certain PNIC
chip revisions. (A buggy taiwanese chip? I'm just shocked; shocked I tell
you.) So far I have only observed the anomalous behavior on board with
PCI revision 33 chips. At the moment, this seems to include only the
Netgear FA310-TX rev D1 boards with chips labeled NGMC169B. (Possibly this
means it's an 82c169B part from Lite-On.)

The bug only manifests itself in promiscuous mode, and usually only at
10Mbps half-duplex. (I have not observed the problem in full-duplex mode,
and I don't think it ever happens at 100Mbps.) The bug appears to be in
the receiver DMA engine. Normally, the chip is programmed with a linked
list of receiver descriptors, each with a receive buffer capable of holding
a complete full-sized ethernet frame. During periods of heavy traffic
(i.e. ping -c 100 -f 8100 <otherhost>), the receiver will sometimes appear
to upload its entire FIFO memory contents instead of just uploading the
desired received frame. The uploaded data will span several receive
buffers, in spite of the fact that the chip has been told to only use
one descriptor per frame, and appears to consist of previously transmitted
frames with the correct received frame appended to the end.

Unfortunately, there is no way to determine exactly how much data is
uploaded when this happens; the chip doesn't tell you anything except the
size of the desired received frame, and the amount of bogus data varies.
Sometimes, the desired frame is also split across multiple buffers.

The workaround is ugly and nasty. The driver assembles all of the data
from the bogus frames into a single buffer. The receive buffers are always
zeroed out, and we program the chip to always include the receive CRC
at the end of each frame. We therefore know that we can start from the
end of the buffer and scan back until we encounter a non-zero data byte,
and say conclusively that this is the end of the desired frame. We can
then subtract the frame length from this address to determine the real
start of the frame, and copy it into an mbuf and pass it on.

This is kludgy and time consuming, but it's better than dropping frames.
It's not too bad since the problem only happens at 10Mbps.

The workaround is only enabled for chips with PCI revision == 33. The
LinkSys LNE100TX and Matrox FastNIC 10/100 cards use a revision 32 chip
and work fine in promiscuous mode. Netgear support has confirmed that
they "have some previous knowledge of problems in promiscuous mode" but
didn't have a workaround. The people at Lite-On who would be able to
suggest a possible fix are on vacation. So, I decided to implement a
workaround of my own until I hear from them. I suppose this problem made
it through Netgear's QA department since Windows doesn't normally use
promiscuous mode, and if Windows doesn't need the feature than it can't
possibly be important, right? Grrr.
1998-12-31 17:19:21 +00:00
dillon
1b46557c21 probe function changed from returning char * to const char *. 1998-12-14 06:37:37 +00:00
archie
60d13c7a9d The "easy" fixes for compiling the kernel -Wunused: remove unreferenced static
and local variables, goto labels, and functions declared but not defined.
1998-12-07 21:58:50 +00:00
wpaul
f72fa84f93 Add sanity check to foo_start() routines: in the unlikely (though
apparently possible) event that the transmit start routine is
called with and empty if_snd queue, bail out instead of dereferencing
unilitialized transmit list pointers and panicking.
1998-12-05 02:21:44 +00:00
wpaul
dfd7dd0c59 An early Christmas present: add driver support for a whole bunch of
PCI fast ethernet adapters, plus man pages.

if_pn.c: Netgear FA310TX model D1, LinkSys LNE100TX, Matrox FastNIC 10/100,
         various other PNIC devices

if_mx.c: NDC Communications SOHOware SFA100 (Macronix 98713A), various
         other boards based on the Macronix 98713, 98713A, 98715, 98715A
         and 98725 chips

if_vr.c: D-Link DFE530-TX, other boards based on the VIA Rhine and
         Rhine II chips (note: the D-Link and certain other cards
         that actually use a Rhine II chip still return the PCI
         device ID of the Rhine I. I don't know why, and it doesn't
         really matter since the driver treats both chips the same
         anyway.)

if_wb.c: Trendware TE100-PCIE and various other cards based on the
         Winbond W89C840F chip (the Trendware card is identical to
         the sample boards Winbond sent me, so who knows how many
         clones there are running around)

All drivers include support for ifmedia, BPF and hardware multicast
filtering.

Also updated GENERIC, LINT, RELNOTES.TXT, userconfig and
sysinstall device list.

I also have a driver for the ASIX AX88140A in the works.
1998-12-04 18:01:24 +00:00