required by arches like sparc64 (not yet implemented) and sun4v where there
are seperate IOMMU's for each PCI bus... For all other arches, it will
end up returning NULL, which makes it a no-op...
Convert a few drivers (the ones we've been working w/ on sun4v) to the
new convection... Eventually all drivers will need to replace the parent
tag of NULL, w/ bus_get_dma_tag(dev), though dev is usually different for
each driver, and will require hand inspection...
Reviewed by: scottl (earlier version)
This enables the scanner function on these devices to be detected
and probed by uscanner(4), but only when ulpt is not loaded.
PR: usb/92462
Submitted by: Friedrich Volkmann
MFC after: 30 days
is never taken since there aren't any 802.11a ural(4) sticks available
on the market.
PR: kern/99676
Submitted by: KIYOHARA Takashi
Reviewed by: damien
MFC after: 1 week
- Curitel PC5740 Wireless Modem (Verizon's PCMCIA card)
- Sierra MC5720 Wireless Modem (Built in to Thinkpad X60s)
The scanner in the PR is already supported.
PR: 98908
Submitted by: Michael Collette <metrol@metrol.net>
blinks by default. When the operating system (read: normally an Xbox
360) initializes the gamepad, the LED stops blinking.
Change our uhid code to do the same.
PR: 97169
Submitted by: Ed Schouten <ed@fxq.nl>
device went away while open or if you tried to change the config
number while devices were open. Based on the patch from the PR with
a number of changes as discussed with the submitter.
PR: usb/97271
Submitted by: Anish Mistry
axe_cmd() calls. Without this the device can get confused if multiple
threads attempt these operations concurrently. The problem was
easily reproducible by running "ifconfig axe0" in a loop because
eventually it would conflict with axe_tick_task().
A similar approach is probably required in all USB ethernet drivers.
(1) bpf peer attaches to interface netif0
(2) Packet is received by netif0
(3) ifp->if_bpf pointer is checked and handed off to bpf
(4) bpf peer detaches from netif0 resulting in ifp->if_bpf being
initialized to NULL.
(5) ifp->if_bpf is dereferenced by bpf machinery
(6) Kaboom
This race condition likely explains the various different kernel panics
reported around sending SIGINT to tcpdump or dhclient processes. But really
this race can result in kernel panics anywhere you have frequent bpf attach
and detach operations with high packet per second load.
Summary of changes:
- Remove the bpf interface's "driverp" member
- When we attach bpf interfaces, we now set the ifp->if_bpf member to the
bpf interface structure. Once this is done, ifp->if_bpf should never be
NULL. [1]
- Introduce bpf_peers_present function, an inline operation which will do
a lockless read bpf peer list associated with the interface. It should
be noted that the bpf code will pickup the bpf_interface lock before adding
or removing bpf peers. This should serialize the access to the bpf descriptor
list, removing the race.
- Expose the bpf_if structure in bpf.h so that the bpf_peers_present function
can use it. This also removes the struct bpf_if; hack that was there.
- Adjust all consumers of the raw if_bpf structure to use bpf_peers_present
Now what happens is:
(1) Packet is received by netif0
(2) Check to see if bpf descriptor list is empty
(3) Pickup the bpf interface lock
(4) Hand packet off to process
From the attach/detach side:
(1) Pickup the bpf interface lock
(2) Add/remove from bpf descriptor list
Now that we are storing the bpf interface structure with the ifnet, there is
is no need to walk the bpf interface list to locate the correct bpf interface.
We now simply look up the interface, and initialize the pointer. This has a
nice side effect of changing a bpf interface attach operation from O(N) (where
N is the number of bpf interfaces), to O(1).
[1] From now on, we can no longer check ifp->if_bpf to tell us whether or
not we have any bpf peers that might be interested in receiving packets.
In collaboration with: sam@
MFC after: 1 month
USBD_FORCE_SHORT_XFER to ensure that we actually build and execute
a transfer. This means that the various alloc_sqtd_chain functions
will always construct a transfer, so it is safe to modify the
allocated descriptors on return. Previously there were cases where
a zero length transfer would cause a NULL dereference.
Reported by: bp
host controllers to avoid the need to allocate any multi-page
physically contiguous memory blocks. This makes it possible to use
USB devices reliably on low-memory systems or when memory is too
fragmented for contiguous allocations to succeed.
The USB subsystem now uses bus_dmamap_load() directly on the buffers
supplied by USB peripheral drivers, so this also avoids having to
copy data back and forth before and after transfers. The ehci and
ohci controllers support scatter/gather as long as the buffer is
contiguous in the virtual address space. For uhci the hardware
cannot handle a physical address discontinuity within a USB packet,
so it is necessary to copy small memory fragments at times.
EHCI spec for linking in new qTDs into an asynchronous QH. This
requires that there is a qTD marked as not active and not halted
at the start of the QH's list, and the hardware will know to re-fetch
the qTD on each pass rather than just looking at the overlay qTD:
"The host controller must be able to advance the queue from the
Fetch QH state in order to avoid all hardware/software race
conditions. This simple mechanism allows software to simply link
qTDs to the queue head and activate them, then the host controller
will always find them if/when they are reachable."
This is achieved by keeping an "inactivesqtd" entry on the QH list,
and re-using it each time as the start of the next transfer, and
allocating a new qTD to become the next inactivesqtd. Then a new
transfer can be activated by just setting its "active" flag, which
avoids all the previous messing with overlay qTD state in
ehci_set_qh_qtd().
before starting exploring (4 seconds), and extend the wait period
if new USB buses are attached while waiting.
This works around a problem seen when there is more than one EHCI
controller in the system and you kldload usb.ko after the system
has booted. The problem is that usb.ko contains 3 separate PCI
drivers which get initialised one by one (uhci, ohci, ehci), and
when each driver is initialised, all PCI buses are re-probed after
just the addition of that driver. This means that there can be a
significant delay between the attaching of a companion controller
and the subsequent EHCI attach, so it is possible for the companion
controller's USB 1.x bus to be scanned before the EHCI driver gets
a chance to check if there is really a USB 2.x device connected.
that have the specified kind, instead of assuming that there is
only one report of the right kind in the report descriptor.
Submitted by: Morten Johansen
Obtained from: NetBSD (indirectly)
PR: usb/77604
transfers. This fixes some cases where the software toggle tracking
was not doing the right thing. For example, a short transfer that
transferred 0 bytes of the requested qTD transfer size does cause
a toggle change, but the existing code was assuming it didn't.
Reported and tested by: pav
MFC after: 2 weeks
Developed with: Norbert Koch < NKoch at demig dot de >
No response from: freebsd-current@
Tested by: Norbert Koch < NKoch at demig dot de >
MFC after: 1 day
is closed and then reopened. This appears to be necessary now that
we no longer clear endpoint stalls every time a pipe is opened.
Previously we could assume an initial toggle value of zero because
the clear-stall operation resets the device's toggle state.
Reported by: Holger Kipp
MFC after: 3 days
try to use the registrant for numbers in this file, not the OEM that
put their label on it. Use PNY's real number 0x154b. Add another PNY
atachmate with quirks from a PR filed a while ago, but that I can't
seem to find now...
o fix contention window
o silently discard received frames that are too short
o simplify lookup of 802.11a channels (we know they exist)
o fix short preamble support
o add short slot support
o fix eifs settings
o many consistency tweaks
ATI EHCI controllers exhibit simmilar stall issues and require
this dropped interrupts workaround. Be verbose about it.
ehci.c:
ehcivar.h:
Slight change in comments to note about issues surrounding both
VIA and ATI EHCI controllers.
Approved by: iedowse
an interrupt appears to occur before the transfer has been marked
as completed. This caused umass transfers to get stuck, especially
when writing large files. The workaround sets up a timer that
rechecks for missed completed transfers if some operations are still
pending. Other suggested workarounds, such as performing a PCI read
immediately after acknowledging the interrupts, do not appear to
help.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
This is based on MCPC USB mobile phone guide line (MCPC-GL005)
Some other 3G system or so will work with this driver.
Kyocera PHS terminal (a.k.a. Kyopon) is known to work, which
is now supported by umodem(4) driver.
USB HID device that allows to plug two PS2 controllers. This specific
device doesn't work yet but will as soon as we support devices with
multiple report IDs.
MFC after: 3 days
broken report descriptor. While I'm here, make all the other report
descriptors const to match the newly added one.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 1 week
lack a report descriptor and don't use the standard interface class.
This patch works around these deficiencies so that the uhid(4) driver
can recognize and use those broken devices.
PR: usb/90141
Submitted by: Ed Schouten <ed@fxq.nl> (with minor mods from me)
MFC after: 1 week
"done" method so that for non-repeat operations we have completely
finished with the transfer by the time the callback is invoked.
This makes it possible to recycle a transfer from within the callback
routine for the same transfer. Previously this almost worked, but
with OHCI controllers calling the "done" method after the callback
would zero out some important fields needed by the recycled transfer.
Only some usb peripheral drivers such as ucom appear to rely on the
ability to reuse a transfer from its callback.
MFC after: 1 week
appeared to rely on all kinds of non-guaranteed behaviours: the
transfer abort code assumed that TDs with no interrupt timeout
configured would end up on the done queue within 20ms, the done
queue processing assumed that all TDs from a transfer would appear
at the same time, and there were access-after-free bugs triggered
on failed transfers.
Attempt to fix these problems by the following changes:
- Use a maximum (6-frame) interrupt delay instead of no interrupt
delay to ensure that the 20ms wait in ohci_abort_xfer() is enough
for the TDs to have been taken off the hardware done queue.
- Defer cancellation of timeouts and freeing of TDs until we either
hit an error or reach the final TD.
- Remove TDs from the done queue before freeing them so that it
is safe to continue traversing the done queue.
This appears to fix a hang that was reproducable with revision 1.67
or 1.68 of ulpt.c (earlier revisions had a different transfer
pattern). With certain HP printers, the command "true > /dev/ulpt0"
would cause ohci_add_done() to spin because the done queue had a
loop. The list corruption was caused by a 3-TD transfer where the
first TD completed but remained on the internal host controller
done queue because it had no interrupt timeout. When the transfer
timed out, the TD got freed and reused, so it caused a loop in the
done queue when it was inserted a second time from a different
transfer.
Reported by: Alex Pivovarov
MFC after: 1 week
just discard the received frame and reuse the old mbuf.
This should prevent the connection from stalling after high network traffic.
MFC after: 2 weeks
from the printer and discarding the data even if the ulpt device
was opened for reading. This resulted in crashes because two
conconcurrent read transfers were using the same transfer structure.
PR: usb/88886
Reported By: Alex Pivovarov
MFC after: 1 week
rather than in ifindex_table[]; all (except one) accesses are
through ifp anyway. IF_LLADDR() works faster, and all (except
one) ifaddr_byindex() users were converted to use ifp->if_addr.
- Stop storing a (pointer to) Ethernet address in "struct arpcom",
and drop the IFP2ENADDR() macro; all users have been converted
to use IF_LLADDR() instead.
---snip---
FYI this bit isn't needed for FreeBSD - I think it came from either
OpenBSD or NetBSD where arc4random() wasn't available during cold
boot.
---snip---
Explained by: iedowse
Synchronise with NetBSD upto rev 1.19:
- Allow 32 chars in the saved vendor string.
- Some NetBSD-only changes.
- Some missing parts (define, variable).
ehci_pci.c:
Add vendor ids for ATI and Philips.
Add identification strings for the following:
o ALi's M5239
o AMD 8111
o ATI SB200, SB400
o Intel 6300ESB, ICH4, ICH5, ICH7
o NVIDIA nForce 2, nForce 3, nForce 4
o Philips ISP156x
ehcireg.h:
We're at the same level as rev 1.18 from NetBSD.
usb_port.h:
NetBSD/OpenBSD specific things
Obtained from: NetBSD via DragonFly
No comment from: usb@
so that devd can match on it. This field was already available to
usbd and is used by a number of usbd.conf entries, so now it is
possible to transfer those entries to devd.conf.
Submitted by: Anish Mistry
o add ic_curchan and use it uniformly for specifying the current
channel instead of overloading ic->ic_bss->ni_chan (or in some
drivers ic_ibss_chan)
o add ieee80211_scanparams structure to encapsulate scanning-related
state captured for rx frames
o move rx beacon+probe response frame handling into separate routines
o change beacon+probe response handling to treat the scan table
more like a scan cache--look for an existing entry before adding
a new one; this combined with ic_curchan use corrects handling of
stations that were previously found at a different channel
o move adhoc neighbor discovery by beacon+probe response frames to
a new ieee80211_add_neighbor routine
Reviewed by: avatar
Tested by: avatar, Michal Mertl
MFC after: 2 weeks
IFF_DRV_RUNNING, as well as the move from ifnet.if_flags to
ifnet.if_drv_flags. Device drivers are now responsible for
synchronizing access to these flags, as they are in if_drv_flags. This
helps prevent races between the network stack and device driver in
maintaining the interface flags field.
Many __FreeBSD__ and __FreeBSD_version checks maintained and continued;
some less so.
Reviewed by: pjd, bz
MFC after: 7 days
when using mice containing a tilt movement: there was a missing
usb_callout_init() for the UMS_SPUR_BUT_UP quirk code, and UMS_T
was defined to the same flag value as UMS_SPUR_BUT_UP.
Reported by: flz
MFC after: 3 days
over iteration of their multicast address lists when synchronizing the
hardware address filter with the network stack-maintained list.
Problem reported by: Ed Maste (emaste at phaedrus dot sandvine dot ca>
MFC after: 1 week
through umass(4), in order to make cdcontrol(1) to issue commands to
a USB CD driver.
The command IDs were obtained from the CAM subsystem. This was tested
on half dozen of USB CD drivers from different vendors.
Suggested by: "intron" <intron at intron dot ac>
PR: usb/83439
Reviewed by: sanpei
MFC After: 1 week
succeed. There are many printers that return status over the read
channel, and if we wait for the status to become ready, then we can't
find the status automatically. Linux doesn't wait, nor does it ever
seem to really check the status in any meaningful way... If there
really is a problem, the writes to the bulk out endpoint will still
fail (like they would if the printer was ready and then ran out of
paper or became unready).
In addition, there are a number of printers being made that emulate
the 'status' byte by returning '0' always rather than '0x18'. This
fixes the EBUSY on open timeouts on those printer as well.
Reviewed by: the defining silence on usb@
o Indent usb ids properly
o Check the return value of if_alloc()
o Call if_free() in ural_detach()
Reviewed by: silby (mentor)
Approved by: re (scottl)
struct ifnet or the layer 2 common structure it was embedded in have
been replaced with a struct ifnet pointer to be filled by a call to the
new function, if_alloc(). The layer 2 common structure is also allocated
via if_alloc() based on the interface type. It is hung off the new
struct ifnet member, if_l2com.
This change removes the size of these structures from the kernel ABI and
will allow us to better manage them as interfaces come and go.
Other changes of note:
- Struct arpcom is no longer referenced in normal interface code.
Instead the Ethernet address is accessed via the IFP2ENADDR() macro.
To enforce this ac_enaddr has been renamed to _ac_enaddr.
- The second argument to ether_ifattach is now always the mac address
from driver private storage rather than sometimes being ac_enaddr.
Reviewed by: sobomax, sam
are used onboard in most of the newer PCI-based sun4u machines
(cosmetic change as they were also already probed as generic OHCI
without this). Detect whether their intpin register is valid and
correct it if necessary, i.e. set the respective IVAR to the right
value for allocating the IRQ resource, as some of them come up
having it set to 0 (mainly those used in Blade 100 and the first
one on AX1105 boards). This fixes attaching affected controllers.
Correcting the intpin value might be better off in the PCI code
via a quirk table but on the other hand gem(4) and hem(4) also
correct it themselves and at least for the USB controller part
the intpin register is truely hardwired to 0 and can't be changed.
This means that we would have to hook up the quirk information
in a lot of places in the PCI code (i.e. whenever the value of the
intpin register is read from or written to the pci_devinfo of the
respective device) in order to do it the right way.
MFC after: 1 month
whether or not the receive pipe is stopped. This ensures that we
do not attempt to start the same transfer twice, and it allows
ucomstop() to skip the restarting of the read pipe if it was not
originally running, such as when called indirectly from ucomreadcb().
PR: kern/79420
MFC after: 1 day
This ensures that we explore EHCI busses before their companion
controllers' busses, so that ports connected to full/low speed
devices will be properly routed to the companion controllers by the
time the OHCI/UHCI exploration occurs.
found it guilty in putting the card into unusable state after UP->DOWN->UP
media status change.
Looks like some of register writes in this functions mess up PHY interface.
No visible regressions has been found after commenting this code out -
the card properly handles forceful local mode changes and auto-detects changes
made remotely (tested with Auto, 10HD, 10FD, 100HD, 100FD).
Sponsored by: PBXpress Inc.
MFC after: 3 days
with the wrong language parameter when retrieving the device serial
number. This invalid request caused some devices not to work at
all.
PR: usb/79190
Submitted by: Hans Petter Selasky <hselasky@c2i.net>
FreeBSD based on aue(4) it was picked by OpenBSD, then from OpenBSD ported
to NetBSD and finally NetBSD version merged with original one goes into
FreeBSD.
Obtained from: http://www.gank.org/freebsd/cdce/
NetBSD
OpenBSD
configure_final(), assert that "cold" is true in usb_cold_explore()
when there are busses to explore. When USB is kldloaded after boot,
usb_cold_explore() will still get invoked but the list of busses
to explore in that case should always be empty.
transfer, which lead to panics or page faults. For example if a
transfer timed out, another thread could come along and attempt to
abort the same transfer while the timeout task was sleeping in
the *_abort_xfer() function.
Add an "aborting" flag to the private transfer state in each host
controller driver and use this to ensure that the abort is only
executed once. Also prioritise normal abort requests over timeouts
so that the callback is always given a status of USB_CANCELLED even
if the timeout-initiated abort began first.
The crashes caused by this bug were mainly reported in connection
with lpd printing to a USB printer.
PR: usb/78208, usb/78986
system have been attached, but no later. This ensures that we do
not explore ohci or uhci busses before the companion echi controller
has been initialised, so it should fix the problem of multi-speed
USB devices getting attached as USB 1 devices first and then
re-attached as USB 2.
Some further changes are needed on architectures that do not currently
allow hooks to be inserted before configure_final() - alpha, ia64,
powerpc and sparc64. On these architectures the exploration will
now be delayed until the usb kthread runs.
cleared if the host controller retries the transfer and is successful,
but we were interpreting these bits as indicating a fatal error.
Ignore these error bits, and instead use the HALTED bit to determine
if the transfer failed. Also update the USBD_STALLED detection to
ignore these bits.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
between passes over a QH. Previously the accesses to a QH were
bunched together in time, so the interval was often much longer
than intended. This now appears to match the diagrams in the EHCI
spec, so remove the XXX comment.
ever working correctly: the code was linking the QHs together but
then immediately overwriting the "next" pointers. Oops. Also
initialise qh_endphub, since the EHCI spec says that we should
always set the pipe multiplier field to something sensible.
This appears to make basic split transactions work, so enable split
transactions for control, bulk and interrupt pipes (split isochronous
transfers are not yet implemented). It should now be possible to
use USB1 devices even when they are connected through a USB2 hub.
o usb_subr.c, add delta 1.119:
Move usb_get_string() and make it public.
o usbdi.c, bring on par with 1.106, this includes:
- Make an iterator abstraction for looping through all descriptors.
- Whine about not being able to figure out default language if we are debugging.
- Move usb_get_string() and make it public.
o usbdi.h, bring on par with 1.64, this includes:
- Make an iterator abstraction for looping through all descriptors.
- Move usb_get_string() and make it public.
o usbdi_util.c, bring on par with 1.42, this includes:
- Add usbd_get_protocol().
- Use NULL instead of 0.
- Fix (mostly harmless) typo.
- Move utility routine from uirda.c to usbdi_util.c.
o usbdi_util.h, bring on par with 1.31, this includes:
- Add usbd_get_protocol().
- Move utility routine from uirda.c to usbdi_util.c.
MFC after: 3 days
base transfer speed to CAM. The actual value used (40MB/s) is fairly
arbitrary, but assumes the same 33% overhead as was implied by the
1MB/s figure we used for USB1 devices.
1/ doesn't matter on most of our architectures
2/ will never happen unless we start queueing multiple trasactions
to a single endpoint at one time (which we do not allow yet).
If anyone has a big_endian machine with EHCI they might check this
if they are having problems with EHCI but it's unlikely even there..
Submitted by: Hans Petter Selasky <hselasky@c2i.net>
MFC after: 3 days
to remove a transaction from the async schedule. The previous method didn't
work well and led to the hardware writing to free'd buffers etc, as
it didn't always know that the transaction had been aborted.
Written after consultation with David Brownell who wrote the Linux
EHCI driver.
As part of this give the sqh structure a "previous" pointer.
MFC after: 1 week
rather than a softc pointer (with the bus structure at the start).
This is a non-functional change. It just helps when reading the code to
know that the ehci, ohci and uhci drivers share the bus structure, not the
entire softc.
ADVANCELOGIC->AVANCELOGIC (nothing in the tree uses it, so safe to do)
sort HAGIWARA vendor entry
sort ACTIONTAR vendor entry
Minor change to SYSTEMTALKS vendor entry.
Add $NetBSD$ in a comment at the top
Update copyright dates
Update header comment
Add some of the entries not present in FreeBSD's usbdevs file
Harmonize some descriptions with NetBSD where NetBSD's were shorter
More work needs to happen here, as there's many conflicting vendor
names. There's also more harmonization that can happen before that
problem is tackled.
This was inspired by recent discussions, but none of the patches
posted were consulted to produce this commit. Other, similar ones
will follow.
This is part of an ongoing cycle of commits on all the BSDs to
merge the USB vendor and device defintions..
A merge from OpenBSD is still pending.
Submitted by: barry bouwsma (freebsd-misuser@NOSPAM.dyndns.dk)
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 1 week
to better keep track of the total amoutn transferred during a
transfer. Seems similar to some code in the NetBSD version.
I notice they have incorporated matches from him so I don't know which
direction it went.
Submitted by: damien.bergamini@free.fr
Obtained from: patches to make the ueagle driver work
MFC after: 1 week
Now only things that are different between us and NetBSD show up.
Means that these files are more of NetBSD style in some places but
since thay are NetBSD files, um, that's ok.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 1 week
backed out commits were trying to address: when cancelling the timeout
callout, also cancel the abort_task event, since it is possible that
the timeout has already fired and set up an abort_task.
reports of problems. The bug is probably that there are cases where
`xfer->timeout && !sc->sc_bus.use_polling' is not a suitable test
for an active timeout callout, so an explicit flag will be necessary.
Apologies for the breakage.
transfer timeouts that typically cause a transfer to be completed
twice, resulting in panics and page faults:
o A transfer completion interrupt could arrive while an abort_task
event was set up, so the transfer would be aborted after it had
completed. This is very easy to reproduce. Fix this by setting
the transfer status to USBD_TIMEOUT before scheduling the
abort_task so that the transfer completion code will ignore it.
o The transfer completion code could execute concurrently with the
timeout callout, leaving the callout blocked (e.g. waiting for
Giant) while the transfer completion code runs. In this case,
callout_stop() does not prevent the callout from running, so
again the timeout code would run after the transfer was complete.
Handle this case by checking the return value from callout_stop(),
and ignoring the transfer if the callout could not be removed.
o Finally, protect against a timeout callout occurring while a
transfer is being aborted by another process. Here we arrange
for the timeout processing to ignore the transfer, and use
callout_drain() to ensure that the callout has really gone before
completing the transfer.
This was tested by repeatedly performing USB transfers with a timeout
set to approximately the same as the normal transfer completion
time. In the PR below, apparently this occurred by accident with a
particular printer and the default timeout.
PR: kern/71491
just a convenience function to be called from debuggers that gets
compiled in when EHCI_DEBUG is defined. Move its declaration to
make this more obvious.
o Reduce the interrupt delay to 2 microframes.
o Follow the spec more closely when updating the overlay qTD in the QH.
o No need to generate an interrupt at the data part of a control
transfer, it's generated by the status transfer.
o Make sure to update the data toggle on short transfers.
o Turn the printf about needing toggle update into a DPRINTF.
o Keep track of what high speed port (if any) a device belongs to
so we can set the transaction translator fields for the transfer.
o Verbosely refuse to open low/full speed pipes that depend on
unimplemented split transaction support.
o Fix various typos in comments.
Obtained from: NetBSD
asynchronous. I realize that this means the custom application will
not work as written, but it is not okay to break most users of ugen(4).
The major problem is that a bulk read transfer is not an interrupt
saying that X bytes are available -- it is a request to be able to
receive up to X bytes, with T timeout, and S short-transfer-okayness.
The timeout is a software mechanism that ugen(4) provides and cannot
be implemented using asynchronous reads -- the timeout must start at
the time a read is done.
The status of up to how many bytes can be received in this transfer
and whether a short transfer returns data or error is also encoded
at least in ohci(4)'s requests to the controller. Trying to detect
the "maximum width" results in using a single buffer of far too
small when an application requests a large read.
Even if you combat this by replacing all buffers again with the
maximal sized read buffer (1kb) that ugen(4) would allow you to
use before, you don't get the right semantics -- you have to
throw data away or make all the timeouts invalid or make the
short-transfer settings invalid.
There is no way to do this right without extending the ugen(4) API
much further -- it breaks the USB camera interfaces used because
they need a chain of many maximal-width transfers, for example, and
it makes cross-platform support for all the BSDs gratuitously hard.
Instead of trying to do select(2) on a bulk read pipe -- which has
neither the information on desired transfer length nor ability to
implement timeout -- an application can simply use a kernel thread
and pipe to turn that endpoint into something poll-able.
It is unfortunate that bulk endpoints cannot provide the same semantics
that interrupt and isochronous endpoints can, but it is possible to just
use ioctl(USB_GET_ENDPOINT_DESC) to find out when different semantics
must be used without preventing the normal users of the ugen(4) device
from working.
New devicename is ttyy{unit}{port}
No callout devices created as there is no modemcontrol on these ports.
Add data structure to represent each port to avoid excessive array use.
from within umass_ufi_transform(). This includes the 12-byte commands
FORMAT_UNIT, WRITE_AND_VERIFY, VERIFY, and READ_FORMAT_CAPACITIES
(sorted in numerical order).
Reviewed by: ken, scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
data endpoints. The control endpoint doesn't need read/write/poll
operations, and more importantly, the thread counts should be
separate so that the control endpoint can properly reference itself
while deleting and recreating the data endpoints.
* Add some macros that handle referencing/releasing devices, and use them
for sleeping/woken-up and open/close operations as apppropriate.
* Use d_purge for FreeBSD, and a loop testing the open status for all
the endpoints for NetBSD and OpenBSD, so that when the device is
detached, the right thing always happens.
restart the current waiting transfer. If this isn't done, the device's
next transfer (that we would like to do a short read on) is going to
return an error -- for short transfer.
* For bulk transfer endpoints, restore the maximum transfer length each
time a transfer is done, or the first short transfer will make all the
rest that size or smaller.
* Remove impossibilities (malloc(M_WAITOK) == NULL, &var == NULL).
to make sure the pipe is ready. Some devices apparently don't support
the clear stall command however. So what happens when you issue such
devices a clear stall command? Typically, the command just times out.
This, at least, is the behavior I've observed with two devices that
I own: a Rio600 mp3 player and a T-Mobile Sidekick II.
It used to be that after the timeout expired, the pipe open operation
would conclude and you could still access the device, with the only
negative effect being a long delay on open. But in the recent past,
someone added code to make the timeout a fatal error, thereby breaking
the ability to communicate with these devices in any way.
I don't know exactly what the right solution is for this problem:
presumeably there is some way to determine whether or not a device
supports the 'clear stall' command beyond just issuing one and waiting
to see if it times out, but I don't know what that is. So for now,
I've added a special case to the error checking code so that the
timeout is once again non-fatal, thereby letting me use my two
devices again.
This changes the naming of USB serial devices to: /dev/ttyU%d and
/dev/cuaU%d for call-in and call-out devices respectively. (Please
notice: capital 'U')
Please also note that we now have .init and .lock devices for USB
serial ports. These are not persistent across device removal. devd(8)
can be used to configure them on attachment time.
These changes also improve the chances of the system surviving if
the USB device is unplugged at an inconvenient time. At least we
do not rip things apart while there are any threads in the device
driver anymore.
Remove cdevsw, rely on the tty generic one.
Don't make_dev(), use ttycreate() which does all the magic.
In detach, do close procesing if we ripped things apart
while the device was open. Call ttyfree() once we're done
cleaning up.
select(2), and discovered to my horror that ugen(4)'s bulk in/out support
is horribly lobotomized. Bulk transfers are done using the synchronous
API instead of the asynchronous one. This causes the following broken
behavior to occur:
- You open the bulk in/out ugen device and get a descriptor
- You create some other descriptor (socket, other device, etc...)
- You select on both the descriptors waiting until either one has
data ready to read
- Because of ugen's brokenness, you block in usb_bulk_transfer() inside
ugen_do_read() instead of blocking in select()
- The non-USB descriptor becomes ready for reading, but you remain blocked
on select()
- The USB descriptor becomes ready for reading
- Only now are you woken up so that you can ready data from either
descriptor.
The result is select() can only wake up when there's USB data pending. If
any other descriptor becomes ready, you lose: until the USB descriptor
becomes ready, you stay asleep.
The correct approach is to use async bulk transfers, so I changed
the read code to use the async bulk transfer API. I left the write
side alone for now since it's less of an issue.
Note that the uscanner driver has the same brokenness in it.
panic on hub detach bugs that have been reported. This work around
detaches the device before deleting it. This changes the detach order
from in-order to pre-order. This avoids uhub's deleting the children
after its subdevs has been deleted.
This is only a workaround. This leads to a strange condition in the
device tree where attached devices are children of detached ones. I
really don't know what that's supposed to mean, but does violate my
sense of POLA. Fortunately, the violation is short lived, which is
why I'm going ahead and committing the work around.
# We really need to consider life w/o the multiple nested layers of
# compatibility macros. They make finding bugs like this *MUCH*
# harder.
Patch by: iadowse
MT5 before: next_release(5.3-BETA5) (unless someting better comes along)
redundant at this point and should be retired). Don't free subdevs if
we don't attach any devices. This was leaving stale device_t's
around. Don't touch the device if it isn't attached since the name
isn't meaningful then. Switch from strncpy (properly used) to
strlcpy.
From a patch submitted by Peter Pentchev
device_t instances when no driver attaches. They are left around, and
we need to remember them.
# The usbd_device_handle->subdevs[] array likely is completely bogus
# at this point, but one change at a time, since its removal will need
# to have similar code replace it extracted from newbus.
Part of the patch submitted by Peter Pentchev after an excellent
analysis of the underlying problems.
MFC After: 1 week
produced better results for a test program I had here, it didn't
substantially change the number of crashes that I saw. Both the old
code and the new code seemed to produce the same crashes from the usb
layer. Since the new code also solves a close() crash, go with it
until the underlying issues wrt devices going away can be addressed.
The reference counts are there to block detach until the sleepers in
read/write/ioctl have gotten out, not to prevent the open device from
going away. Restore the old behavior so that we have a chance to wake
up sleepers when the usb device goes away, so they can properly return
EIO back to the caller when this happens.
Otherwise, we have a guarnateed panic waiting to happen when a device
detaches with an active read channel.
This should be merged to 5 asap.
to RS232 bridges, such as the one found in the DeLorme Earthmate USB GPS
receiver (which is the only device currently supported by this driver).
While other USB to serial drivers in the tree rely heavily on ucom, this
one is self-contained. The reason for that is that ucom assumes that
the bridge uses bulk pipes for I/O, while the Cypress parts actually
register as human interface devices and use HID reports for configuration
and I/O.
The driver is not entirely complete: there is no support yet for flow
control, and output doesn't seem to work, though I don't know if that is
because of a bug in the code, or simply because the Earthmate is a read-
only device.
Without this, the device cannot detect the end of ethernet packets
whose size is a multiple of the USB packat size.
PR: kern/70474
Submitted by: Andrew Thompson <andy@fud.org.nz>
MFC after: 1 week
o reprobe children when a new driver is added to uhub
o fix the usbd_probe_and_attach to set the ivars to a malloc'd area, as well
as freeing the ivars on child destruction.
o Don't delete children that don't attach. Evidentally, the need to do this
is a common misconception.
o minor formatting foo that may violate style(9) at the moment, but keeps the
diffs against my p4 tree smaller.
This does not solve the ugen gobbling things up problem, but the fixes
I have for that expose bugs in other parts of the tree...
if_start routines cannot currently be entered without Giant. When
the kernel is running with debug.mpsafenet != 0, this will defer
if_start execution to a task queue thread holding Giant, which may
introduce additional latency, but avoid incorrect execution.
Suggested by: dfr
skip blocks that are too big by a factor of two or greater. This
avoids some cases of extremely inefficient memory use that can occur
when large (e.g. 64k) blocks on the free list get used when allocating
a 4k chunk of 64-byte fragments. Because fragments have their own
free list, the 60k difference got lost forever every time.
system BIOS to disable legacy device emulation as per the "EHCI
Extended Capability: Pre-OS to OS Handoff Synchronisation" section
of the EHCI spec. BIOSes that implement legacy emulation using SMIs
are supposed to disable the emulation when this procedure is performed.
to be particularly correct or optimal, but it seems to be enough
to allow the attachment of USB2 hubs and USB2 devices connected via
USB2 hubs. None of the split transaction support is implemented in
our USB stack, so USB1 peripherals will definitely not work when
connected via USB2 hubs.
Improve child_detached a little and make it conform better to
style(9). Also, improve comment about what we'll be doing in the
future about driver_added. Soon it will be possible to kldload usb
drivers and have them attach w/o a need to disconnect/reconnect them.
usbdi.c rev. 1.104, author: mycroft
ugen_isoc_rintr() may recycle the xfer immediately. Therefore, we
avoid touching the xfer after calling the callback in
usb_transfer_complete(). From PR 25960.
future:
rename ttyopen() -> tty_open() and ttyclose() -> tty_close().
We need the ttyopen() and ttyclose() for the new generic cdevsw
functions for tty devices in order to have consistent naming.
rev. 1.67, author: mycroft
Fix a byte order error.
rev. 1.68, author: mycroft
Adjust some silliness that was causing us to do extra work for
"frame list rollover" interrupts, which we pretty much ignore.
Obtained from: NetBSD
rev. 1.68, author: mycroft
Ignore a port error that happens to come in at the same time as a
connect status change. Some root hubs seem to report both.
Obtained from: NetBSD
bus interfaces. These interfaces use the FTDI chipset with different
Vendor and Product IDs.
Add two additional baud rate enumerations. The vehicle bus interfaces
use a baud rate of 2000000. Also add 3000000 as it is the other FTDI
baud divisor special case.
I've commited a slightly different patch from that provided in the PR as
I changed the matching code a bit yesterday.
Submitted by: Mike Durian <durian at shadetreesoftware.com>
PR: kern/67357
operations when the refcount doesn't protect the opens and closes. Fix
this, and don't actually let a time out happen: now ugen(4) devices do
not get freed out from under the programs with them open.
uhid.c (1.61), author: jdolecek
add support for USB_GET_DEVICEINFO and USB_GET_STRING_DESC ioctls,
with same meaning as for ugen(4)
usbdi_util.h (1.29), usb_quirks.c (1.50), uhid.c (1.62),
ugen.c (1.68), usb_subr.c (1.114) author: mycroft
Yes, some devices return incorrect lengths in their string
descriptors. Rather than losing, do what Windows does: just
request the maximum size, and allow a shorter response. Obsoletes
the need for UQ_NO_STRINGS, and therefore these "quirks" are removed.
usb_subr.c (1.116), author: mycroft
In the "seemed like a good idea until I found the fatal flaw"
department... Attempting to read a maximum-size string descriptor
causes my kue device to go completely apeshit. So, go back to the
original method, but allow the device to return a shorter string than
it claimed.
Obtained from: NetBSD
copies.
No current line disciplines have a dynamically changing hotchar, and
expecting to receive anything sensible during a change in ldisc is
insane so no locking of the hotchar field is necessary.
ohci.c (1.147), author: mycroft
Failure to properly mask off UE_DIR_IN from the endpoint address
was causing OHCI_ED_FORMAT_ISO and EHCI_QH_HRECL to get set
spuriously, causing rather interesting lossage.
Suddenly I get MUCH better performance with ehci...
ohci.c (1.148), author: mycroft
Adjust a couple of comments to make it clear WTF is going on.
Obtained from: NetBSD
ehci.c (1.55), ehcireg.h (1.16); author: mycroft
Set the data toggle correctly, and use EHCI_QTD_DTC. This fixes
problems with my ALi-based drive enclosure (it works now, rather
than failing to attach). Also seems to work with a GL811-based
enclosure and an ASUS enclosure with a CD-RW, on both Intel and
NEC controllers.
Note: The ALi enclosure is currently very SLOW, due to some issue
with taking too long to notice that the QTD is complete. This
requires more investigation.
ehci.c (1.56); author: mycroft
Failure to properly mask off UE_DIR_IN from the endpoint address
was causing OHCI_ED_FORMAT_ISO and EHCI_QH_HRECL to get set
spuriously, causing rather interesting lossage.
Suddenly I get MUCH better performance with ehci...
ehci.c (1.58); author: mycroft
Fix a stupid bug in ehci_check_intr() that caused use to try to
complete a transaction that was still running. Now ehci can
handle multiple devices being active at once.
ehci.c (1.59); author: enami
As the ehci_idone() now uses the variable `epipe'
unconditionally, always declare it (in other words, make this
file compile w/o EHCI_DEBUG).
ehci.c (1.60); author: mycroft
Remove comment about the data toggle being borked.
ehci.c (1.61); author: mycroft
Update comment.
ehci.c (1.62); author: mycroft
Adjust a couple of comments to make it clear WTF is going on.
ehci.c (1.63); author: mycroft
Fix an error in a debug printf().
ehci.c (1.64), ehcireg.h (1.17); author: mycroft
Further cleanup of toggle handling. Now that we use EHCI_QH_DTC,
we don't need to fiddle with the TOGGLE bit in the overlay
descriptor, so minimize how much we fuss with it.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Thanks to Sam for importing tags in a way that allowed this to be done.
Submitted by: Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@cell.sick.ru>
Also allow the sr and ar drivers to create netgraph versions of their modules.
Document the change to the ksocket node.
Several changes:
* Implement read for ulpt.
* If the device is not opened for reading, occasionally drain any
data the printer might have (but don't hammer the printer with reads).
* Lower the buffer size to one page.
The driver seems to work with more printers now.
Obtained from: NetBSD
as otherwise the junk it contains may cause uhub_explore to give
up without ever trying to restart the port. This fixes the following
errors I was seeing with a VIA UHCI controller:
uhub0: port error, restarting port 1
uhub0: port error, giving up port 1
called ttyldoptim().
Use this function from all the relevant drivers.
I belive no drivers finger linesw[] directly anymore, paving the way for
locking and refcounting.
pipes, since open pipes are linked off a usbd_interface structure
that is free()'d when the configuration index is changed. Attempting
to close or use such pipes later would access freed memory and
usually crash the system.
The only driver that is known to trigger this problem is if_axe,
which is itself at fault, but it is worth detecting the situation
to avoid the obscure crashes that result from this type of easily
made driver mistakes.
in all USB ethernet drivers. The qdat structure contains a pointer
to the interface's struct ifnet and is used to process incoming
packets, so simultaneous use of two similar devices caused crashes
and confusion.
The if_udav driver appeared in the tree since Daan's PR, so I made
similar changes to that driver too.
PR: kern/59290
Submitted by: Daan Vreeken <Danovitsch@Vitsch.net>
MFNetBSD 1.177; author: toshii
Use the correct wValue to get hub desriptors.
Also, make wValue checks of root hub codes less strict.
MFNetBSD 1.178: author: martin
Interrupt descriptors might become invalid while being processed in
uhci_check_intr - so remember their next pointer before calling it.
Patch provided by Matthew Orgass in PR kern/24542.
Obtained from: NetBSD
that the OHCI driver uses. Broken OHCI devices (like the controller
in my laptop, apparently) like to set this bit at times. Research
through google shows that this problem has shown up on other systems
as well.
As the scheduling overrun handler doesn't actually do anything, and
the only effect is console spamming, disabling the interrupt seems
to be the right thing to do. (And it is also what linux 2.6 does.)
Introduce d_version field in struct cdevsw, this must always be
initialized to D_VERSION.
Flip sense of D_NOGIANT flag to D_NEEDGIANT, this involves removing
four D_NOGIANT flags and adding 145 D_NEEDGIANT flags.
Add missing D_TTY flags to various drivers.
Complete asserts that dev_t's passed to ttyread(), ttywrite(),
ttypoll() and ttykqwrite() have (d_flags & D_TTY) and a struct tty
pointer.
Make ttyread(), ttywrite(), ttypoll() and ttykqwrite() the default
cdevsw methods for D_TTY drivers and remove the explicit initializations
in various drivers cdevsw structures.
Free approx 86 major numbers with a mostly automatically generated patch.
A number of strategic drivers have been left behind by caution, and a few
because they still (ab)use their major number.
For some very unclear reason this device contains a FTDI 8U232AM USB->COM
adapter, but reports different device id than original 8U232AM. At the same
time, it reports vendor id of FTDI.
Sponsored by: Porta Software Ltd
MFC after: 2 weeks
ubd_devinfo_vp() is getting an empty string from its usbd_get_string()
call on the vendor, instead of NULL. This means usb_knowndevs in not
consulted.
Add lines between grabbing those char *s and the USBVERBOSE ifdef to
set vendor to NULL if it is the empty string (similarly for product).
This causes vendor to be filled-out, although the product name read
overrules usb_knowndevs (this appears to be a conscience decision made
by the NetBSD folks):
PR: kern/56097
Submitted by: Hal Burch <hburch@lumeta.com>
MFC after: 1 week
unmodified for ATAPI type devices with ports/sysutils/cdrtools.
(But we need timeout routine which was in kern/58649 for fixate, I think.)
PR: kern/58649
Submitted by: SAKIYAMA Nobuo <sakichan@sakichan.org>
broken BIOS. Separate ohci_controller_init() from ohci_init(),
and call ohci_controller_init() at resume process once more.
Discussed on [bsd-nomads:16737] - [bsd-nomads:16746].
Submitted by Hiroyuki Aizu <eyes@navi.org> [bsd-nomads:16741]
methods for USB devices in the same way of uhci driver. But this change
is not complete because some ohci controlers are not initialized completely.
So "kernel: usb0: 1 scheduling overruns" interrupt will generate many times.
This change will be same one in PR kern/60099.
Discussed on [bsd-nomads:16737] - [bsd-nomads:16746].
this problem put these lines back in. While they should be
unnecessary, they appear to be sometimes necessary.
Reviewed in concept: dfr
Approved by: re (scottl@)
transfer descriptors when a large request needs to be split into
more than one 8k chunk. The bug was that the calculation did not
take into account the offset of the chunk within the overall request.
This is reported to fix crashes and data corruption on ohci
controllers.
Submitted by: green
Approved by: re
multicast hash are written. There are still two distinct algorithms used,
and there actually isn't any reason each driver should have its own copy
of this function as they could all share one copy of it (if it grew an
additional argument).
revision 1.142
date: 2003/10/11 03:04:26; author: toshii
Fix a done list handling bug which exhibits under high shared
interrupt rate and bus traffic. As the interrupt register is
read after checking hcca_done_head, there was a small chance
of dropping a done list. Ignore OHCI_WDH interrupt bit if
hcca_done_head is zero so that OHCI_WDH is processed later.
revision 1.141
date: 2003/09/10 20:08:29; author: mycroft;
Update actlen even in the case where a TD returns an error --
this is critical for the umass bulk-only STALL case.
revision 1.176
date: 2003/11/04 19:11:21; author: mycroft;
Ignore a CRCTO error on a SETUP transaction in combination with
STALLED or NAK. This fixes problems with the GL641.
- remove the unnecessary elm arg from SIMPLEQ_REMOVE_HEAD().
this mirrors the functionality of SLIST_REMOVE_HEAD() (the other
singly-linked list type) and FreeBSD's STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD()
thread being waken up. The thread waken up can run at a priority as
high as after tsleep().
- Replace selwakeup()s with selwakeuppri()s and pass appropriate
priorities.
- Add cv_broadcastpri() which raises the priority of the broadcast
threads. Used by selwakeuppri() if collision occurs.
Not objected in: -arch, -current
whether or not the isr needs to hold Giant when running; Giant-less
operation is also controlled by the setting of debug_mpsafenet
o mark all netisr's except NETISR_IP as needing Giant
o add a GIANT_REQUIRED assertion to the top of netisr's that need Giant
o pickup Giant (when debug_mpsafenet is 1) inside ip_input before
calling up with a packet
o change netisr handling so swi_net runs w/o Giant; instead we grab
Giant before invoking handlers based on whether the handler needs Giant
o change netisr handling so that netisr's that are marked MPSAFE may
have multiple instances active at a time
o add netisr statistics for packets dropped because the isr is inactive
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation
PALM_4 initialisation hack. I've not confirmed it myself, but
seeing as we already don't use it for the Sony Clie_41, let's drop
it from the Clie_40 also and see what happens.
(Question: What about the Clie_S360 and Clie_NX60 devices? Do we
need to drop Palm4 from those as well? Possibly, but I've not had
any reports about those so I don't know.)
PR: kern/56575
MFC after: 3 days
to the pci attachment. Cardbus is a derived class of pci so all pci
drivers are automatically available for matching against cardbus devices.
Reviewed by: imp
if_xname, if_dname, and if_dunit. if_xname is the name of the interface
and if_dname/unit are the driver name and instance.
This change paves the way for interface renaming and enhanced pseudo
device creation and configuration symantics.
Approved By: re (in principle)
Reviewed By: njl, imp
Tested On: i386, amd64, sparc64
Obtained From: NetBSD (if_xname)
beasts which are reported to exist in both Atmel and Prism2 flavours. In
particular, Itronix branded laptops have the Atmel part with an Intersil
radio.
Obtained from: NetBSD
even could call VOP_REVOKE() on vnodes associated with its dev_t's
has originated, but it stops right here.
If there are things people belive destroy_dev() needs to learn how to
do, please tell me about it, preferably with a reproducible test case.
Include <sys/uio.h> in bluetooth code rather than rely on <sys/vnode.h>
to do so.
The fact that some of the USB code needs to include <sys/vnode.h>
still disturbs me greatly, but I do not have time to chase that.
the Palm device and the USB host controller deadlock. The USB host
controller is expecting an early-end-of-transmission packet with 0
data, and the Palm doesn't send one because it's already communicated
the amount of data it's going to send in a header (which ucom/uvisor
are oblivious to). This is the problem that has been known on the
pilot-link lists as the "[Free]BSD USB problem", but not understood.
Submitted by: Nathan J. Williams <nathanw@MIT.EDU>
allocation function. With this patch, it prevents continous growth of
the devbuf memory pool.
Tested with ssh <host> dd of=/dev/null < /dev/zero and vmstat -m | grep devbuf
receive 6 byte commands. Add a check for this flag to da(4) and cd(4) so
that they honor it. This is a quick workaround for many devices (especially
USB) that require da(4) quirks to operate. The more complete approach is
to finish the new transport code which will be aware of the SCSI version a
transport implements.
MFC after: 1 day
go looking for free fragments won't match. Since we never free this, we
can "throw away" the tag. This is very dirty, and needs to be reimplemented
properly, but fixes performance problems with uhci.
Also assert that when we overlay a structure on some space, that the
space is large enough for the structure.
sync of the NetBSD code.
fix isochornous support for ohci. This gets webcams like my OV511
working on sparc64.
PR: kern/52589
Submitted by: Bruce R. Montague (isochonous support)
Reviewed by: joe among others
MFNetBSD: revision 1.137
date: 2003/01/20 07:12:13; author: simonb;
Grrr. So much for my ability to use grep(1) effectively. Pointed out
by Stephen Degler in private mail.
date: 2002/12/10 14:07:37; author: toshii; state: Exp; lines: +6 -6
Add a couple of le32toh which were missing in the previous.
Pointed out by SOMEYA Yoshihiko.
date: 2002/12/07 07:33:20; author: toshii; state: Exp; lines: +50 -29
Update xfer->frlengths for input isoc transfer. Based on patches from
SOMEYA Yoshihiko.
Also fix error handling for isoc transfer somewhat; usb_transfer_complete
shouldn't be called for more than once.
date: 2002/12/07 07:14:28; author: toshii;
Fix several nits. Mostly from SOMEYA Yoshihiko.
- Call usbd_transfer_complete at splusb.
- Fix a botched for loop in ohci_rem_ed.
- In ohci_close_pipe, wait 1ms after removing an ED to avoid possible race
condition.
The splusb change is non-functional on FreeBSD.
The botched loop and race condition changes came from us.
This patch is non-functional.
date: 2002/09/29 20:58:25; author: augustss;
Add some spl calls to protect critical regions. From kern/18440,
Takeshi Nakayama.
(No functional change on FreeBSD).
date: 2002/12/31 02:21:31; author: dsainty;
Be somewhat more persuasive about enabling the port on a port reset.
USB protocol dictates that the port enable must be implied by the port
reset. To implement this on (at least) the VIA VT83C572 this means we
need to wait around tweaking the chip state until the port actually
transitions to enabled (or the device goes away). Likely fixes
kern/11018.
get a Hub descriptor, we have to set req.wValue to "Descriptor Type
and Descriptor Index". In this case, Descriptor Type is 0x29
(UDESC_HUB), Descriptor Index should be 0.
If I don't do a check (dev->address > 1 ... ), root hub fails.
A new Cytronix 4-port USB 2.0 Hub (Cypress CY7C65640 chip) now works
after this patch.
Submitted by: Alexander Pohoyda <alexander.pohoyda@gmx.net>
MFC after: 7 days
- MN-110 10/100 USB ethernet (ADMtek Pegasus II, if_aue)
- MN-120 10/100 cardbus (ADMtek Centaur-C, if_dc)
- MN-130 10/100 PCI (ADMtek Centaur-P, if_dc)
Also update dc(4) man page to mention support for MN-120 and MN-130.
the bulk out buffer size to 16 bytes. The bulk out endpoint descriptor
reports 32 bytes, but if you use this value, data will get dropped.
Reviewed/approved by: scottl
This is based on the ubsa driver by Alexander Kabaev along with documentation
gleaned from the Linux mct_u232 driver. I've had this driver sitting in my
tree for almost 6 months, and several others have found it useful.
populated. Apparently, if you use an ehci controller, it's not.
Use usbd_device2interface_handle() to retrieve the interface handle.
NOTE: uaa->iface is populated in the probe routine, so I suspect the
fact that it's NULL in the attach routine is a bug in the ehci driver.
Also, don't depend on the PHY addresses returned by the AXE_CMD_READ_PHYID
command. The address is correct for my LinkSys NIC, but a user has
reported that with a D-Link NIC, the PHYID command returns address 4
while the attached Broadcom PHY is in fact strapped for address 0.
Instead, latch onto the first PHY address that returns valid data
during a readreg operation.
ulpt_status() afterwards. This fixes a crash that can occur if a
USB printer is power-cycled when printing is just starting. The
problem is similar to that fixed in revision 1.33, but it is much
less likely to occur.
MFC after: 1 week
This fixes net/pppoa port for Alcatel Speedtouch devices.
Submitted by: Jay Cornwall <jay@evilrealms.net>
Tested by: Francois Rogler <francois@rogler.org>
Approved by: re (scottl)
all of the Optio series have the same problems. It might be a better
approach eventually to add wildcard support to USB quirks.
PR: kern/50271, kern/46369
Approved by: re (rwatson)
ethernet controller. The driver has been tested with the LinkSys
USB200M adapter. I know for a fact that there are other devices out
there with this chip but don't have all the USB vendor/device IDs.
Note: I'm not sure if this will force the driver to end up in the
install kernel image or not. Special magic needs to be done to exclude
it to keep the boot floppies from bloating again, someone please
advise.
network layer (ether).
- Don't abuse module names to facilitate ifconfig module loading;
such abuse isn't really needed. (And if we do need type information
associated with a module then we should make it explicit and not
use hacks.)
The former fakes a valid response to an inquiry command. (I am completely
blown away that there are devices which hang upon receiving inquiry). The
latter returns "invalid request" to any inquiry commands with EVPD set.
NO_INQUIRY implies NO_INQUIRY_EVPD but not vice versa. Both quirks have been
tested separately on my USB key although it didn't require either of them.
While I'm here, fix wildcarding so that any/all of vendor, product, revision
can be wildcarded.
Idea from: Linux
MFC after: 2 weeks
it is expected that they will not be enabled at the time that it
is called. This is reported to work around a problem in RELENG_4
where the kernel panics on boot if FAST_IPSEC and crypto support
are enabled.
Tested by: Scott Johnson <scottj@insane.com>
use the underlying AsahiOptical USB chip and thus this quirk may need to
be generalized in the future.
PR: kern/46369
Submitted by: Tim Vanderhoek <vanderh@ecf.utoronto.ca>
MFC After: 3 days