The i350 (and possibly other Intel NICs) have a non-trivial
correspondence between the PCI function number and the external
physical port number. For example, the i350 has a "LAN Function Sel"
bit within the EEPROM which can invert the mapping so that function 0
becomes port 3, function 1 becomes port 2, etc.
Unfortunately the MAC addresses within the EEPROM are indexed by
physical port number rather than PCI function number. The end result
is that when anything other than the default mapping is used, iPXE
will use the wrong address as the base MAC address.
Fix by using the autoloaded MAC address if it is valid, and falling
back to reading the MAC address directly from the EEPROM only if no
autoloaded address is available.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
End users almost certainly don't care whether the underlying interface
is SNP or NII/UNDI. Try to minimise surprise and unnecessary
documentation by including the NII driver whenever the SNP driver is
requested.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
iPXE itself exposes a dummy NII protocol with no UNDI. Avoid
potentially dereferencing a NULL pointer by checking for a non-zero
UNDI address.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some UEFI network drivers provide a software UNDI interface which is
exposed via the Network Interface Identifier Protocol (NII), rather
than providing a Simple Network Protocol (SNP).
The UEFI platform firmware will usually include the SnpDxe driver,
which attaches to NII and provides an SNP interface. The SNP
interface is usually provided on the same handle as the underlying NII
device. This causes problems for our EFI driver model: when
efi_driver_connect() detaches existing drivers from the handle it will
cause the SNP interface to be uninstalled, and so our SNP driver will
not be able to attach to the handle. The platform firmware will
eventually reattach the SnpDxe driver and may attach us to the SNP
handle, but we have no way to prevent other drivers from attaching
first.
Fix by providing a driver which can attach directly to the NII
protocol, using the software UNDI interface to drive the network
device.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The snpnet driver uses netdev_tx_defer() and so must ensure that space
in the (single-entry) transmit descriptor ring is freed up before
calling netdev_tx_complete().
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add the ID for the LM variant and differentiate it from the I217-V.
Signed-off-by: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
We currently require information about the underlying PCI device to
populate the snpnet device's name and description. If the underlying
device is not a PCI device, this will fail and prevent the device from
being registered.
Fix by falling back to populating the device description with
information based on the EFI handle, if no PCI device information is
available.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some systems will install a child of the SNP device and use this as
our loaded image's device handle, duplicating the installation of the
underlying SNP protocol onto the child device handle. On such
systems, we want to end up driving the parent device (and
disconnecting any other drivers, such as MNP, which may be attached to
the parent device).
Fix by recording the SNP protocol instance at initialisation time, and
using this to match against device handles (rather than simply
comparing the handles themselves).
Reported-by: Jarrod Johnson <jarrod.b.johnson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
ICH8 devices have an errata which requires us to reconfigure the
packet buffer size (PBS) register, and correspondingly adjust the
packet buffer allocation (PBA) register. The "Intel I/O Controller
Hub ICH8/9/10 and 82566/82567/82562V Software Developer's Manual"
notes for the PBS register that:
10.4.20 Packet Buffer Size - PBS (01008h; R/W)
Note: The default setting of this register is 20 KB and is
incorrect. This register must be programmed to 16 KB.
Initial value: 0014h
0018h (ICH9/ICH10)
It is unclear from this comment precisely which devices require the
workaround to be applied. We currently attempt to err on the side of
caution: if we detect an initial value of either 0x14 or 0x18 then the
workaround will be applied. If the workaround is applied
unnecessarily, then the effect should be just that we use less than
the full amount of the available packet buffer memory.
Unfortunately this approach does not play nicely with other device
drivers. For example, the Linux e1000e driver will rewrite PBA while
assuming that PBS still contains the default value, which can result
in inconsistent values between the two registers, and a corresponding
inability to transmit or receive packets. Even more unfortunately,
the contents of PBS and PBA are not reset by anything less than a
power cycle, meaning that this error condition will survive a hardware
reset.
The Linux driver (written and maintained by Intel) applies the PBS/PBA
errata workaround only for devices in the ICH8 family, identified via
the PCI device ID. Adopt a similar approach, using the PCI_ROM()
driver data field to indicate when the workaround is required.
Reported-by: Donald Bindner <dbindner@truman.edu>
Debugged-by: Donald Bindner <dbindner@truman.edu>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Under some circumstances (e.g. if iPXE itself is booted via iSCSI, or
after an unclean reboot), the backend may not be in the expected
InitWait state when iPXE starts up.
There is no generic reset mechanism for Xenbus devices. Recent
versions of xen-netback will gracefully perform all of the required
steps if the frontend sets its state to Initialising. Older versions
(such as that found in XenServer 6.2.0) require the frontend to
transition through Closed before reaching Initialising.
Add a reset mechanism for netfront devices which does the following:
- read current backend state
- if backend state is anything other than InitWait, then set the
frontend state to Closed and wait for the backend to also reach
Closed
- set the frontend state to Initialising and wait for the backend to
reach InitWait.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Using version 1 grant tables limits guests to using 16TB of grantable
RAM, and prevents the use of subpage grants. Some versions of the Xen
hypervisor refuse to allow the grant table version to be set after the
first grant references have been created, so the loaded operating
system may be stuck with whatever choice we make here. We therefore
currently use version 2 grant tables, since they give the most
flexibility to the loaded OS.
Current versions (7.2.0) of the Windows PV drivers have no support for
version 2 grant tables, and will merrily create version 1 entries in
what the hypervisor believes to be a version 2 table. This causes
some confusion.
Avoid this problem by attempting to use version 1 tables, since
otherwise we may render Windows unable to boot.
Play nicely with other potential bootloaders by accepting either
version 1 or version 2 grant tables (if we are unable to set our
requested version).
Note that the use of version 1 tables on a 64-bit system introduces a
possible failure path in which a frame number cannot fit into the
32-bit field within the v1 structure. This in turn introduces
additional failure paths into netfront_transmit() and
netfront_refill_rx().
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The behavior observed in the Apple EFI (1.10) RecieveFilters() call
is:
- failure if any of the PROMISCUOUS or MULTICAST filters are
included
- success if only UNICAST is included, however the result is
UNICAST|BROADCAST
- success if only UNICAST and BROADCAST are included
- if UNICAST, or UNICAST|BROADCAST are used, but the previous call
tried (and failed) to set UNICAST|BROADCAST|MULTICAST, then the
result is UNICAST|BROADCAST|MULTICAST
Work around this apparently broken SNP implementation by trying
RecieveFilterMask, then falling back to UNICAST|BROADCAST|MULTICAST,
then UNICAST|BROADCAST, and finally UNICAST.
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Tested-by: Curtis Larsen <larsen@dixie.edu>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some EFI 1.10 systems (observed on an Apple iMac) do not allow us to
open the device path protocol with an attribute of
EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER and so we cannot maintain a safe,
long-lived pointer to the device path. Work around this by instead
opening the device path protocol with an attribute of
EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_GET_PROTOCOL whenever we need to use it.
Debugged-by: Curtis Larsen <larsen@dixie.edu>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
According to the UEFI specification, the MCastFilter parameter (which
we currently pass as NULL, along with a zero MCastFilterCnt) is
optional only if ResetMCastFilter is true.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Dump the existing openers of a protocol whenever we are unable to open
a protocol using attributes of BY_DEVICE, EXCLUSIVE, or
BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Using efi_devpath_text() is marginally more efficient if we already
have the device path protocol available, but the mild increase in
efficiency is not worth compromising the clarity of the pattern:
DBGC ( device, "THING %p %s ...", device, efi_handle_name ( device ) );
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Rewrite the SNP NIC driver to use non-blocking and deferrable
transmissions, to provide link status detection, to provide
information about the underlying (PCI) hardware device, and to avoid
unnecessary I/O buffer allocations during receive polling.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The VF might not have assigned a MAC address upon startup, and will
end up with a random MAC address during probe(). With this patch the
MAC address can be changed later on.
Signed-off-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
If the VF doesn't have a MAC address assigned we should create a
random MAC address.
Signed-off-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
As of commit d28bb51 ("[tcp] Defer sending ACKs until all received
packets have been processed"), increasing the RX ring size will
increase the number of received packets per transmitted ACK (since
each poll will process up to one complete receive ring). Under KVM,
this can make a substantial (up to ~200%) difference to the overall
download speed, since transmissions are very expensive.
Increase the ring fill level from four to eight packets: this
increases the download speed by around 50% at a cost of around 8kB of
heap space. Further speedups are possible by increasing the ring size
further, but it would be preferable to find alternative methods which
do not use noticeable amounts of heap space.
Tested-by: Robin Smidsrød <robin@smidsrod.no>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
When profiling, exclude any time spent inside the hypervisor
responding to our MMIO accesses. This substantially reduces the
variance accumulated on many other profilers.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Inside a virtual machine, writing the RX ring tail pointer may incur a
substantial overhead of processing inside the hypervisor. Minimise
this overhead by writing the tail pointer once per batch of
descriptors, rather than once per descriptor.
Profiling under qemu-kvm (version 1.6.2) shows that this reduces the
amount of time taken to refill the RX descriptor ring by around 90%.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Operations which are negligible on physical hardware (such as issuing
a posted write to the transmit ring tail register) may involve
substantial amounts of processing within the hypervisor if running in
a virtual machine.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
It is unclear from the datasheets whether or not the TX ring can be
completely filled (i.e. whether writing the tail value as equal to the
current head value will cause the ring to be treated as completely
full or completely empty). It is very plausible that this edge case
could differ in behaviour between real hardware and the many
implementations of an emulated Intel NIC found in various virtual
machines. Err on the side of caution and always leave at least one
ring entry empty.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
On an Asus Z87-K motherboard with an onboard 8168 NIC, booting into
Windows 7 and then warm rebooting into iPXE results in a broken RX
datapath: packets can be transmitted successfully but garbage is
received. A cold reboot clears the problem.
A dump of the PHY registers reveals only one difference: in the
failure case the bits ADVERTISE_PAUSE_CAP and ADVERTISE_PAUSE_ASYM are
cleared. Explicitly setting these bits does not fix the problem.
A dump of the MAC registers reveals a few differences, of which the
most obvious culprit is the undocumented bit 24 of the Receive
Configuration Register (RCR), which is set in the failure case.
Explicitly clearing this bit does fix the problem.
Reported-by: Sebastian Nielsen <ipxe@sebbe.eu>
Reported-by: Oliver Rath <rath@mglug.de>
Debugged-by: Sebastian Nielsen <ipxe@sebbe.eu>
Tested-by: Sebastian Nielsen <ipxe@sebbe.eu>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The fetch_setting() family of functions may currently modify the
definition of the specified setting (e.g. to add missing type
information). Clean up this interface by requiring callers to provide
an explicit buffer to contain the completed definition of the fetched
setting, if required.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Prevent the card from flagging packets of 1518 bytes length as
overlength.
This fixes the High-MTU loopback test.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The 3c90x B and C revisions support rounding up the packet length to a
specific boundary. Disable this feature to avoid overlength packets.
This fixes the loopback test.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
According to the 3c90x datasheet we have to stall the upload (receive)
engine before setting the receive ring address.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some hardware (observed with an onboard RTL8168) will erroneously
report a buffer overflow error if the received packet exactly fills
the receive buffer.
Fix by adding an extra four bytes of padding to each receive buffer.
Debugged-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Jamróz <adrian.jamroz@gmail.com>
Modified-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Replace the old via-rhine driver with a new version using the iPXE
API.
Includes fixes by Thomas Miletich for:
- MMIO access
- Link detection
- RX completion in RX overflow case
- Reset and EEPROM reloading
- CRC stripping
- Missing cpu_to_le32() calls
- Missing memory barriers
Signed-off-by: Adrian Jamróz <adrian.jamroz@gmail.com>
Modified-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Robin Smidsrød <robin@smidsrod.no>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Tested-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
realtek_destroy_ring() currently does nothing if the card is operating
in legacy (pre-RTL8139C+) mode. In particular, the producer and
consumer counters are incorrectly left holding their current values.
Virtual hardware (e.g. the emulated RTL8139 in qemu and similar VMs)
is tolerant of this behaviour, but real hardware will fail to transmit
if the descriptors are not used in the correct order.
Fix by resetting the producer and consumer counters in
realtek_destroy_ring() even if the card is operating in legacy mode.
Reported-by: Gelip <mrgelip@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Create an explicit concept of "settings scope" and eliminate the magic
values used for numerical setting tags.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
On some systems, it appears to be possible for writes to the EEPROM
registers to be delayed for long enough that the EEPROM's setup and
hold times are violated, resulting in invalid data being read from the
EEPROM.
Fix by inserting a PCI read cycle immediately after writes to
RTL_9346CR, to ensure that the write has completed before starting the
udelay() used to time the SPI bus transitions.
Reported-by: Gelip <mrgelip@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Gelip <mrgelip@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some older RTL8139 chips seem to not immediately update the
RTL_CR.BUFE bit in response to a write to RTL_CAPR. This results in
iPXE seeing a spurious zero-length received packet, and thereafter
being out of sync with the hardware's RX ring offset.
Fix by inserting an extra PCI read cycle after writing to RTL_CAPR, to
give the chip time to react before we next read RTL_CR.
Reported-by: Gelip <mrgelip@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Gelip <mrgelip@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some onboard RTL8169 NICs seem to leave the EEPROM pins disconnected.
The existing is_valid_ether_addr() test will not necessarily catch
this, since it expects a missing EEPROM to show up as a MAC address of
00:00:00:00:00:00 or ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff. When the EEPROM pins are
floating the MAC address may read as e.g. 00:00:00:00:0f:00, which
will not be detected as invalid.
Check the ID word in the first two bytes of the EEPROM (which should
have the value 0x8129 for all RTL8139 and RTL8169 chips), and use this
to determine whether or not an EEPROM is present.
Reported-by: Carl Karsten <carl@nextdayvideo.com>
Tested-by: Carl Karsten <carl@nextdayvideo.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Exploit the redefinition of iPXE error codes to include a "platform
error code" to allow for meaningful conversion of EFI_STATUS values to
iPXE errors and vice versa.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The Intel 10 Gigabit NICs have a datapath that is almost
register-compatible with the Intel 1 Gigabit NICs. Expose common
functionality to avoid duplication of code in the new "intelx" driver.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The Intel 10 Gigabit NICs use the same simplified (aka "legacy")
descriptor format and the same layout for descriptor register blocks
as the Intel 1 Gigabit NICs. The offsets of the descriptor register
blocks are not the same.
Simplify reuse of the existing code by removing all hardcoded offsets
for registers within descriptor register blocks, and ensuring that all
offsets are calculated using the descriptor register block base
address provided via intel_init_ring().
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Avoid using UINT16 and similar typedefs, which are non-standard in the
iPXE codebase and generate conflicts when trying to include any of the
EFI headers.
Also fix trailing whitespace in the affected files, to prevent
complaints from git.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove macros which aren't used anywhere in the driver, and which
conflict with macros of the same name used in the EFI headers.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove macros which aren't used anywhere in the driver, and which
conflict with macros of the same name used in the EFI headers.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Commit 947976d ("[netdevice] Do not force a poll on net_tx()")
requires network devices to have TX rings that are sufficiently large
to allow a transmitted response to all packets received during a
single poll.
Reported-by: Robin Smidsrød <robin@smidsrod.no>
Tested-by: Robin Smidsrød <robin@smidsrod.no>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The Intel NIC emulation in some versions of VMware seems to suffer
from a flaw whereby the Interrupt Cause Register (ICR) fails to assert
the usual "packet received" bit (ICR.RXT0) if a receive overflow
(ICR.RXO) has also occurred.
Work around this flaw by polling for completed descriptors whenever
either ICR.RXT0 or ICR.RXO is asserted.
Reported-by: Miroslav Halas <miroslav.halas@bankofamerica.com>
Debugged-by: Miroslav Halas <miroslav.halas@bankofamerica.com>
Tested-by: Miroslav Halas <miroslav.halas@bankofamerica.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Almost all clients of the raw-packet interfaces (UNDI and SNP) can
handle only Ethernet link layers. Expose an Ethernet-compatible link
layer to local clients, while remaining compatible with IPoIB on the
wire. This requires manipulation of ARP (but not DHCP) packets within
the IPoIB driver.
This is ugly, but it's the only viable way to allow IPoIB devices to
be driven via the raw-packet interfaces.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some RTL8169 cards seem to drive the EEPROM CS line high (i.e. active)
when 9346CR.EEM is set to "normal operating mode", with the result
that the CS line is never deasserted. The symptom of this is that the
first read from the EEPROM will work, while all subsequent reads will
return garbage data.
Reported-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Debugged-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some RTL8169 cards (observed with an RTL8169SC) power up advertising
only 100Mbps, despite being capable of 1000Mbps. Forcibly enable
advertisement of 1000Mbps on any RTL8169-like card.
This change relies on the assumption that the CTRL1000 register will
not exist on 100Mbps-only RTL8169 cards such as the RTL8101.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some RTL8169 cards (observed with an RTL8169SC) crash and burn if DAC
is enabled, even if only 32-bit addresses are used. Observed
behaviour includes system lockups and repeated transmission of garbage
data onto the wire.
This seems to be a known problem. The Linux r8169 driver disables DAC
by default and provides a "use_dac" module parameter.
There appears to be no known test for determining whether or not DAC
will work. As a workaround, enable DAC only if we are built as as
64-bit binary. This at least eliminates the problem in the common
case of a 32-bit build, which will never use 64-bit addresses anyway.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some bits in the C+ Command register are always one. Testing for the
presence of the register must allow for this.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some RTL8169 cards (observed with an RTL8169SC) power up with
TCR.MXDMA set to 16 bytes. While this does not prevent proper
operation, it almost certainly degrades performance.
Fix by explicitly setting TCR.MXDMA to "unlimited".
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some RTL8169 cards (observed with an RTL8169SC) power up with invalid
values in RCR.RXFTH and RCR.MXDMA, causing receive DMA to fail. Fix
by setting explicit values for both fields.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some RTL8169 cards (observed with an RTL8169SC) power up with garbage
values in the ring address registers, and do not clear the registers
on reset.
Fix by always setting the high dword of the ring address registers.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Change the DMA alignment from 4096 bytes to 16 bytes, to conserve
available DMA memory. The hardware doesn't have any specific
alignment requirements.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Datasheet pp. 41-42 defines 'rx packet length' as upper word of
'status' dword field of the receive descriptor table.
http://www.smsc.com/media/Downloads_Archive/discontinued/83c171.pdf
Tested on SMC EtherPower II.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Smazhenko <darkover@corbina.com.ua>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
On i350 the datasheet contradicts itself in stating that the default
value of RXDCTL.ENABLE for queue zero is both set (according to the
"Receive Initialization" section) and unset (according to the "Receive
Descriptor Control - RXDCTL" section). Empirical evidence suggests
that the default value is unset.
Explicitly enable both transmit and receive queues to avoid any
ambiguity.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
On 82576 (and probably others), the datasheet states that "the tail
register of the queue (RDT[n]) should not be bumped until the queue is
enabled". There is some confusion over exactly what constitutes
"enabled": the initialisation blurb says that we should "poll the
RXDCTL register until the ENABLE bit is set", while the description
for the RXDCTL register says that the ENABLE bit is set by default
(for queue zero). Empirical evidence suggests that the ENABLE bit
reads as set immediately after writing to RCTL.EN, and so polling is
not necessary.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Use hw pointer in PCI driver data as expected by sky2_remove().
Signed-off-by: Valentine Barshak <gvaxon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
RTL8139C+ cards use essentially the same datapath as RTL8169, which is
zerocopy and 64-bit capable. Older RTL8139 cards use a single receive
ring buffer rather than a descriptor ring, but still share substantial
amounts of functionality with RTL8169.
Include support for RTL8139 cards within the generic Realtek driver,
since there is no way to differentiate between RTL8139 and RTL8139C+
cards based on the PCI IDs alone.
Many thanks to all the people who worked on the rtl8139 driver over
the years.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The link state is currently set at probe time, and updated only when
the device is polled. This results in the user seeing a misleading
stale "Link: down" message, if autonegotiation did not complete within
the short timespan of the probe routine.
Fix by updating the link state when the device is opened, so that the
message that ends up being displayed to the user reflects the real
link state at device open time.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Tested-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Debugged-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Robin Smidsrød <robin@smidsrod.no>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
iPXE provides no support for manually configuring the link speed.
Provide a generic routine which should be able to reset any MII/GMII
PHY and enable autonegotiation.
Prototyped-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add support for 82579-based chips such as those found on Sandy Bridge
motherboards. Based on d3738bb8203acf8552c3ec8b3447133fc0938ddd in
Linux.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hokka Zakrisson <daniel@hozac.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Practically speaking, it seems the convention is to only have one
packet pending and not rely upon any mechanism to associate returned
txbuf with txqueue.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
This function never did much in this driver anyway, and after commit
b5ed30b2 ("[tg3] Fix compilation on newer gcc versions") it became
apparent that its remaining functionality could be easily moved to
tg3_test_dma().
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Replace the old Etherboot tg3 driver with a more up-to-date driver
using the iPXE API.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The RS bit is used to instruct the NIC to update the TX descriptor
status byte. The RPS bit is used to instruct the NIC to defer this
update until after the packet has been transmitted on the wire (rather
than merely read into the transmit FIFO).
The driver currently sets RPS but not RS. Some e1000 models seem to
interpret this as implying that the status byte should be updated;
some don't. On the ones that don't, we never see any TX completions
and so rapidly run out of TX buffers.
Fix by setting the RS bit in the TX descriptor. (We don't care about
when the packet reaches the wire, so don't bother setting the RPS
bit.)
Reported-by: Miroslav Halas <miroslav.halas@bankofamerica.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Avoid spurious matches for peer key 0 against empty peer cache
entries, and set the LL_MULTICAST flag in addition to LL_BROADCAST.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The ChipCmd register is only an 8-bit register. The 16-bit access
used by iPXE was causing an issue when used with qemu emulated rtl8139
device which was improperly aligning IOs.
Signed-off-by: Julian Pidancet <julian.pidancet@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Allow the link layer to directly report whether or not a packet is
multicast or broadcast at the time of calling pull(), rather than
relying on heuristics to determine this at a later stage.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Reported-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
iPXE operates the forcedeth NIC in promiscuous mode, and never changes
the unicast MAC address filter registers. We should not therefore set
the flag indicating (to other drivers loaded later) that the MAC
address order has already been corrected.
Reported-by: Tal Aloni <tal.aloni.il@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Tal Aloni <tal.aloni.il@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The forcedeth driver currently implements unicast MAC address
filtering in software. This is almost invariably the wrong thing to
do (since the network stack must already be able to cope with unwanted
packets) and it breaks FCoE (which requires the card to operate in
promiscuous mode).
Also, the implementation is buggy: is_local_ether_addr() is used to
check for a locally-assigned Ethernet address (not to check for a
unicast address), and the current link-layer address is in
netdev->ll_addr, not netdev->hw_addr.
Fix by removing this code.
Reported-by: Tal Aloni <tal.aloni.il@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Tal Aloni <tal.aloni.il@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Avoid unused-but-set variable warning in gcc 4.6 which was introduced
by commit 9215b7f ("[forcedeth] Clear the MII link status register on
link status changes").
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Expose a function setting_applies() to allow a caller to determine
whether or not a particular setting is applicable to a particular
settings block.
Restrict DHCP-backed settings blocks to accepting only DHCP-based
settings.
Restrict network device settings blocks to accepting only DHCP-based
settings and network device-specific settings such as "mac".
Inspired-by: Glenn Brown <glenn@myri.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
From a cursory examination, it appears as though the calculation of
tx_available is redundant, since eepro_transmit() waits for transmit
completion before returning anyway.
Reported-by: Ralph Giles <giles@thaumas.net>
Tested-by: Ralph Giles <giles@thaumas.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
On reset and close, the ICR register is read to clear any pending
interrupts, but the value is simply ignored. Avoid assigning the
value to a variable, to inhibit a warning from gcc 4.6.
Also fix a potential race condition in reset routines which clear
interrupts before disabling them.
Reported-by: Ralph Giles <giles@thaumas.net>
Tested-by: Ralph Giles <giles@thaumas.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
These unused portions trigger a compiler warning under gcc 4.6, due to
the ambiguity over the "page" field in struct igbvf_buffer.
Reported-by: Ralph Giles <giles@thaumas.net>
Tested-by: Ralph Giles <giles@thaumas.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
In a virtual environment such as qemu, we can legitimately receive
packets less than 64 bytes in length, such as ARP replies. These are
currently discarded, causing most IPv4 communication to fail.
Fix by ignoring the RFDShort bit when receiving packets.
Reported-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Merge the "bus" and "devfn" fields into a single "busdevfn" field, to
match the format used by the majority of external code.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove duplicate hardware resets, remove network interface logic
reset.
This also fixes a bug where some 3c905C variants would return bogus
EEPROM values because of a too short delay after the network reset.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Peter Huewe <peterhuewe@gmx.de>
Tested-by: Peter Huewe <peterhuewe@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
DBG is reserved for errors and important warnings only.
DBG2 for additional information, e.g. "received packet".
DBGP is used to print the name of every function as it is called.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich<thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove the concept of shutdown exit flags, and replace it with a
counter used to keep track of exposed interfaces that require devices
to remain active.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Support a new function mode "multi-function 8 Direct IO" which is used
in ESX Direct I/O configuration.
Update driver version to 3.5.0.1
Signed-off-by: Masroor Vettuparambil <masroor.vettuparambil@exar.com>
Signed-off-by: Sivakumar Subramani <sivakumar.subramani@exar.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Since its implementation several years ago, no driver has used a
fragment list containing more than a single fragment. Simplify the
NVO core and the drivers that use it by removing the whole concept of
the fragment list, and using a simple (address,length) pair instead.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Driver for Intel 82576 based virtual functions, based on Intel source
code available at:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/e1000 (igbvf-1.0.7)
Based on initial port from Eric Keller <ekeller@princeton.edu>.
Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Changes were made to files where the licence text within the files
themselves confirms that the files are GPL version 2 or later.
Signed-off-by: Shao Miller <shao.miller@yrdsb.edu.on.ca>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Pass the settings block name as a parameter to register_settings(),
rather than defining it with settings_init() (and then possibly
changing it by directly manipulating settings->name).
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
FCoE requires us to be able to receive unicast packets for multiple
addresses. Support this by operating in promiscuous mode.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
An attempt to transmit a packet of 8192 bytes or larger will collide
with the status bits in the TX descriptor. This gives the appearance
of the network card's transmit data path having just suddenly stopped
responding; iPXE is waiting for the card to report a TX completion
but, because of the status bit collision, the card thinks that the
descriptor has not yet been written.
Fix by explicitly checking for oversized packets in rtl_transmit().
Discovered during Fibre Channel over Ethernet testing, and debugged by
using gdb to examine the state of the emulated rtl8139 card in qemu.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Replace the explicit calls from the Infiniband core to the IPoIB layer
with the general concept of an Infiniband upper-layer driver
(analogous to a PCI driver) which can create arbitrary devices on top
of Infiniband devices.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The rtl8139 driver includes the Ethernet CRC within the received
packet. All current protocols ignore trailing garbage, but FCoE
requires the frame length to be correct (since the FCoE footer
position is calculated from the end of the packet), so fix the driver
to strip out the CRC.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add PCI ID 8086:27dc to the eepro100 driver.
Reported-by: Cédric Delmas <c.delmas@akka.eu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
alloc_memblock() and free_memblock() are internal.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jaroszyński <p.jaroszynski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
pcbios specific get_memmap() is used by the b44 driver making
all-drivers builds fail on other platforms. Move it to the I/O API
group and provide a dummy implementation on EFI.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jaroszyński <p.jaroszynski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
This patch adds a native iPXE forcedeth driver and removes the legacy
Etherboot forcedeth driver. It supports 40 different chips, compared
to the original 14.
It has been tested on a NIC with an CK804 Ethernet Controller, and the
results of downloading 5 100mb images in a row have been:
12/11/11/11/11 seconds; booting DSL using pxelinux also succeeded. The
driver has also been tested by chaining undionly.kpxe and it worked.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Faur <da3drus@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Andrei Faur <da3drus@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Guo-Fu Tseng <cooldavid@cooldavid.org>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
This patch adds a native iPXE virtio-net driver and removes the legacy
Etherboot virtio-net driver. The main reasons for doing this are:
1. Multiple virtio-net NICs are now supported by iPXE. The legacy
driver kept global state and caused issues in virtual machines with
more than one virtio-net device.
2. Faster downloads. The native iPXE driver downloads 100 MB over
HTTP in 12s, the legacy Etherboot driver in 37s. This simple
benchmark uses KVM with tap networking and the Python
SimpleHTTPServer both running on the same host.
Changes to core virtio code reduce vring descriptors to 256 (QEMU uses
128 for virtio-blk and 256 for virtio-net) and change the opaque token
from u16 to void*. Lowering the descriptor count reduces memory
consumption. The void* opaque token change makes driver code simpler.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
This bug caused .probe to fail because the NIC did not reset properly.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Faur <da3drus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add NonVolatile Option (nvo) and NonVolatile Storage (nvs) support to
the myri10ge driver using the EEPROM read/write mechanism provided by
the NIC's Vendor Specific PCI capability.
The myri10ge NIC is capabile of storing 64KB or more of nonvolatile
options, but this patch advertises only 512 bytes of nvo storage
because iPXE malloc's a buffer matching the total size we advertise.
512 is plenty without wasting malloc'd memory. (The 2 other drivers
currently supporting nvo advertise 256 bytes or less.)
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
This patch removes the cfg lookup made in the r8169 driver and
replaces it with equivalent information found in the driver_data field
of the pci_device_id structure.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Faur <da3drus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
This patch replaces the old pcnet32 driver with a new one that
uses iPXE's API.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Faur <da3drus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
After changing the driver to refill after feed, if any error occurs a
non-contiguous empty buffer will be introduced in the ring due to my
reuse-buffer-when-error implementation.
Reported-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Signed-off-by: Guo-Fu Tseng <cooldavid@cooldavid.org>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
A new driver for JMicron Ethernet controller.
Reviewed-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Brown <mbrown@fensystems.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Signed-off-by: Guo-Fu Tseng <cooldavid@cooldavid.org>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add a new network driver that consumes the EFI Simple Network
Protocol. Also add a bus driver that can find the Simple Network
Protocol that iPXE was loaded from; the resulting behavior is similar
to the "undionly" driver for BIOS systems.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Apart from format specifier fixes there are two changes in proper code:
- Change type of regs in skge_hw to unsigned long
- Cast result of sizeof in myri10ge to uint32_t
Both don't change anything for i386 and should be fine on x86_64.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jaroszyński <p.jaroszynski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Access to the gpxe.org and etherboot.org domains and associated
resources has been revoked by the registrant of the domain. Work
around this problem by renaming project from gPXE to iPXE, and
updating URLs to match.
Also update README, LOG and COPYRIGHTS to remove obsolete information.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Christopher Armenio reported link detection problems with an
integrated eepro100 NIC. Thomas Miletich removed link detection code
from the eepro100 driver and verified that the driver continued to
function. Christopher verified Thomas' patch on his integrated
eepro100 NIC.
Reported-by: Christopher Armenio <christopher.armenio@resquared.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
In building gpxe for openSUSE Factory (part of kvm package), there were
a few problems identified by the compiler. This patch addresses them.
Signed-off-by: Bruce Rogers <brogers@novell.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
The interrupt control mechanism on Phantom cards has changed
substantially since the driver was initially written. This updates
the code to match the mechanism used in production firmware.
This is sufficient to allow DOS wget to function successfully using
the 3Com UNDI/NDIS, Intel UNDI/NDIS, and UNDIPD.COM UNDI/PD stacks.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@etherboot.org>
This commit adds an igb (Intel GigaBit) driver based on Intel source
code available at:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/e1000/
which is upstream source for the Linux kernel e1000 drivers, and
should support some PCIe e1000 variants.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
This commit adds an e1000e driver based on Intel source code
available at:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/e1000/
which is upstream source for the Linux kernel e1000 drivers, and
should support many PCIe e1000 variants.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
This commit replaces the current gPXE e1000 driver with one ported
from Intel source code available at
http://sourceforge.net/projects/e1000/
which is upstream source for the Linux kernel e1000 drivers, and
should support most if not all PCI e1000 variants.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
The vxge driver code is split over several files, including vxge_main.c.
This causes the build system and ROM-o-matic to see the driver as
"vxge_main".
This patch adds a stub vxge.c which takes up no space but gives the
driver its proper name, "vxge".
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
The rtl818x driver uses programmed I/O but has a fallback to
memory-mapped I/O registers. The fallback currently will not work since
the registers are accessed using inl()/outl() programmed I/O functions
in the driver. This patch removes the fallback to we fail cleanly when
programmed I/O is not possible.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
This driver uses programmed I/O to access hardware registers. There is
a stray memory-mapped I/O read on a programmed I/O address. Perhaps
this is an artifact of porting the driver. Fix this by converting it to
programmed I/O.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
The previous [skge] commit should have been recorded as authored by
Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
I mistakenly committed it improperly after fixing a merge issue.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
This code is based on the linux skge driver. It supports Marvell Yukon
and SysKonnect Gigabit chipsets.
The code is based on code Michael Decker <mrd999@gmail.com> wrote for
Google Summer of Code 2008.
Support for dual-port cards is untested. The code, however, was left
in. In my opinion it's easier to fix the code if we need to, instead
of having to add support for it from scratch.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
This driver supports all current Myricom 10 gigabit Ethernet NICs.
It was written from scratch for gPXE by Glenn Brown <glenn@myri.com>,
referenencing Myricom's Linux and EFI drivers, with permission.
Signed-off-by: Glenn Brown <glenn@myri.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
This version is Based on Michael Decker's GSoC 2008 code.
A number cleanups and fixes were applied.
Earlier-version-reviewed-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Earlier-version-tested-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Earlier-version-tested-by: Shao Miller <Shao.Miller@yrdsb.edu.on.ca>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
The 82571 supports an alternate MAC address location in NVRAM.
When this is set, use this for the MAC rather than the default
physical MAC address.
Ported from linux-2.6.git 93ca161027eb6a1761fb674ad7b995aedccf5f6e
Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@hp.com>
Tested-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
The first byte of the IPoIB MAC address is used for flags indicating
support for "connected mode". Strip out the non-QPN bits of the first
dword when constructing the address vector for transmitted IPoIB
packets, so as not to end up passing an invalid QPN in the BTH.
Error message was:
[BUILD] bin/atl1e.oncc1: warnings being treated as errors
drivers/net/atl1e.c: In function 'atl1e_get_permanent_address':
drivers/net/atl1e.c:1326: error: dereferencing type-punned pointer will break strict-aliasing rules
make: *** [bin/atl1e.o] Error 1
Reported-by: Giandomenico De Tullio <ghisha@email.it>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@etherboot.org>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@etherboot.org>
Remove spaces in 3rd PCI_ROM field.
Debugged-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Reported-by: Giandomenico De Tullio <ghisha@email.it>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@etherboot.org>
The iBFT is Ethernet-centric in providing only six bytes for a MAC
address. This is most probably an indirect consequence of a similar
design flaw in the Windows NDIS stack. (The WinOF IPoIB stack
performs all sorts of contortions in order to pretend to the NDIS
layer that it is dealing with six-byte MAC addresses.)
There is no sensible way in which to extend the iBFT without breaking
compatibility with programs that expect to parse it. Add the notion
of an "Ethernet-compatible" MAC address to our link layer abstraction,
so that link layers can provide their own workarounds for this
limitation.
gcc 3.3.3 gave the following error when compiling sis190.c
drivers/net/sis190.c: In function 'sis190_get_mac_addr_from_apc':
drivers/net/sis190.c:966: warning: 'isa_bridge' might be used
uninitialized in this function
make: *** [bin/sis190.o] Error 1
This patch allows error-free compilation.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Some BIOSes set the PCI cacheline size to zero for the card; the ath5k
driver fixes it to a reasonable in PCI config space, but failed to
correct the internal value it had already read. This resulted in
divide-by-zero errors when cacheline-aligning various data structures.
Fix by setting the internal cachelsz to a sane value at the same time
as we write that value to PCI config space.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
This adds basic rfkill support for enabling the wireless card on certain
laptops, and changes miscellaneous other details that may help in obscure
cases.
Also change the error handling to not report CRC errors, which due to the
basic facts of wireless may happen even more frequently than valid packets.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Add the 82576 to the e1000 driver.
- Examining the Linux 2.6.30-rc4 igb driver, which supports this card and;
- Information available in the Intel® 82576 Gigabit Ethernet
Controller Datasheet v2.1, which is available from Intel's web site.
I only have a dual-ported card with Copper PHY, so any code paths relating
to Fibre haven't been tested. Also, I have only tested using auto-negotiation
of speed and duplex, and no flow control. Other code paths relating to
those settings also have not been exercised.
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms@verge.net.au>
Sponsored-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Modified-by: Thomas Miletich <thomas.miletich@gmail.com>
Modified-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Enable interrupts in sis900_irq(). Doing so allows some programs using
gPXE's UNDI interface to work properly, including Symantec Ghost.
Tested-by: Hubert Mercier <hubert.mercier@unilim.fr>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Both methods disabled packet tx and rx just to have it enabled again
by calling a3c90x_reset().
Fixed by disabling tx and rx after the call to a3c90x_reset().
Tested by booting Ubuntu intrepid(8.10) directly from gPXE and pxelinux.
Tested on 3c905, 3c905B, 3c905C.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
IPoIB has a 20-byte link-layer address, of which only eight bytes
represent anything relating to a "hardware address".
The PXE and EFI SNP APIs expect the permanent address to be the same
size as the link-layer address, so fill in the "permanent address"
field with the initial link layer address (as generated by
register_netdev() based upon the real hardware address).
The hardware address is an intrinsic property of the hardware, while
the link-layer address can be changed at runtime. This separation is
exposed via APIs such as PXE and EFI, but is currently elided by gPXE.
Expose the hardware and link-layer addresses as separate properties
within a net device. Drivers should now fill in hw_addr, which will
be used to initialise ll_addr at the time of calling
register_netdev().
The prior net80211 model of physical-layer behavior for drivers was
overly simplistic and limited the drivers that could be written. To
be more flexible, split the driver-provided list of supported rates by
band, and add a means for specifying a list of supported channels.
Allow drivers to specify a hardware channel value that will be tied to
uses of the channel.
Expose net80211_duration() to drivers, and make the rate it uses in
its computations configurable, so that it can be used in calculating
durations that must be set in hardware for ACK and CTS packets. Add
net80211_cts_duration() for the common case of calculating the
duration for a CTS packet.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@etherboot.org>
Queue pairs are now assumed to be created in the INIT state, with a
call to ib_modify_qp() required to bring the queue pair to the RTS
state.
ib_modify_qp() no longer takes a modification list; callers should
modify the relevant queue pair parameters (e.g. qkey) directly and
then call ib_modify_qp() to synchronise the changes to the hardware.
The packet sequence number is now a property of the queue pair, rather
than of the device.
Each queue pair may have an associated address vector. For RC queue
pairs, this is the address vector that will be programmed in to the
hardware as the remote address. For UD queue pairs, it will be used
as the default address vector if none is supplied to ib_post_send().
The queue key is stored as a property of the queue pair, and so can
optionally be added by the Infiniband core at the time of calling
ib_post_send(), rather than always having to be specified by the
caller.
This allows IPoIB to avoid explicitly keeping track of the data queue
key.
Now that path record lookups are handled entirely via
ib_resolve_path(), the only role of the IPoIB peer cache is as a
lookup table for MAC addresses. Update the code structure and
comments to reflect this.
The IPoIB broadcast MAC address varies according to the partition key.
Now that the broadcast MAC address is a property of the network device
rather than of the link layer, we can expose this real MAC address
directly.
The broadcast LID is now identified via a path record lookup; this is
marginally inefficient (since it was present in the MCMemberRecord
GetResponse), but avoids the need to special-case broadcasts when
constructing the address vector in ipoib_transmit().
Currently, all Infiniband users must create a process for polling
their completion queues (or rely on a regular hook such as
netdev_poll() in ipoib.c).
Move instead to a model whereby the Infiniband core maintains a single
process calling ib_poll_eq(), and polling the event queue triggers
polls of the applicable completion queues. (At present, the
Infiniband core simply polls all of the device's completion queues.)
Polling a completion queue will now implicitly refill all attached
receive work queues; this is analogous to the way that netdev_poll()
implicitly refills the RX ring.
Infiniband users no longer need to create a process just to poll their
completion queues and refill their receive rings.
IPoIB and the SMA have separate constants for the packet size to be
used to I/O buffer allocations. Merge these into the single
IB_MAX_PAYLOAD_SIZE constant.
(Various other points in the Infiniband stack have hard-coded
assumptions of a 2048-byte payload; we don't currently support
variable MTUs.)
IPoIB has a link-layer broadcast address that varies according to the
partition key. We currently go through several contortions to pretend
that the link-layer address is a fixed constant; by making the
broadcast address a property of the network device rather than the
link-layer protocol it will be possible to simplify IPoIB's broadcast
handling.
In order to construct outgoing link-layer frames or parse incoming
ones properly, some protocols (such as 802.11) need more state than is
available in the existing variables passed to the link-layer protocol
handlers. To remedy this, add struct net_device *netdev as the first
argument to each of these functions, so that more information can be
fetched from the link layer-private part of the network device.
Updated all three call sites (netdevice.c, efi_snp.c, pxe_undi.c) and
both implementations (ethernet.c, ipoib.c) of ll_protocol to use the
new argument.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@etherboot.org>
The pcnet32 driver mismanages its RX buffers, with the result that
packets get corrupted if more than one packet arrives between calls to
poll().
Originally-fixed-by: Bill Lortz <Bill.Lortz@premier.org>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Also adds the MAC_ADDR_CORRECT flag, to indicate whether or not the
MAC address needs to be fixed up by the driver.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@etherboot.org>
This is a major rewrite of the legacy etherboot 3c90x driver using the
gPXE API for much improved performance over the legacy driver it
replaces.
This driver has been tested on 3c905, 3c905B, and 3c905C cards.
Reviewed-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Tested-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Tested-by: Daniel Verkamp <daniel@drv.nu>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Following the example of the Linux driver, we add a check and delay to
make sure that the NIC has finished resetting before the driver issues
any additional commands.
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
This previously unsupported NIC variant was was found to work using
the current driver:
PCI_ROM(0x13f0, 0x0200, "ip100a", "IC+ IP100A"),
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Driver was storing the result of pci_bar_start() and pci_bar_size() in
an int, rather than an unsigned long.
(Bug was introduced in the vendor's tree in commit eac85cd "Port
etherfabric driver to net_device api".)
When compiling for the Linux kernel, PCI_BASE_ADDRESS_0 == 0, and
PCI_BASE_ADDRESS_1 == 1. This is not so when compiling for gPXE. We
must use the symbolic names rather than integers to get the correct
values.
Bug identified and patch supplied by:
George Chou <george.chou@advantech.com>
This driver is based on Stefan Hajnoczi's summer work, which
is in turn based on version 1.01 of the linux b44 driver.
I just assembled the pieces and fixed/added a few pieces
here and there to make it work for my hardware.
The most major limitation is that this driver won't work
on systems with >1GB RAM due to the card not having enough
address bits for that and gPXE not working around this
limitation.
Still, other than that the driver works well enough for
at least 2 users :) and the above limitation can always
be fixed when somebody wants it bad enough :)
Signed-off-by: Pantelis Koukousoulas <pktoss@gmail.com>
This brings us in to line with Linux definitions, and also simplifies
adding x86_64 support since both platforms have 2-byte shorts, 4-byte
ints and 8-byte long longs.
The return path in directed route SMPs lists the egress ports in order
from SM to node, rather than from node to SM.
To write to the correct offset within the return path, we need to
parse the hop pointer. This is held within the class-specific data
portion of the MAD header, which was previously unused by us and
defined to be a uint16_t. Define this field to be a union type; this
requires some rearrangement of ib_mad.h and corresponding changes to
ipoib.c.
Some Infiniband cards will not be as accommodating as the Arbel and
Hermon cards in providing enough space for us to push a fake extra
header at the start of the received packet. We must therefore make do
with squeezing enough information to identify source and destination
addresses into the two bytes of padding within a genuine IPoIB
link-layer header.
Not all Infiniband cards have embedded subnet management agents.
Split out the code that communicates with such an embedded SMA into a
separate ib_smc.c file, and have drivers call ib_smc_update()
explicitly when they suspect that the answers given by the embedded
SMA may have changed.