Improve PMF-ability.
Add a 'flags' argument to suspend/resume handlers and
callers such as pmf_system_suspend().
Define a flag, PMF_F_SELF, which indicates to PMF that a
device is suspending/resuming itself. Add helper routines,
pmf_device_suspend_self(dev) and pmf_device_resume_self(dev),
that call pmf_device_suspend(dev, PMF_F_SELF) and
pmf_device_resume(dev, PMF_F_SELF), respectively. Use
PMF_F_SELF to suspend/resume self in ath(4), audio(4),
rtw(4), and sip(4).
In ath(4) and in rtw(4), replace the icky sc_enable/sc_disable
callbacks, provided by the bus front-end, with
self-suspension/resumption. Also, clean up the bus
front-ends. Make sure that the interrupt handler is
disestablished during suspension. Get rid of driver-private
flags (e.g., RTW_F_ENABLED, ath_softc->sc_invalid); use
device_is_active()/device_has_power() calls, instead.
In the network-class suspend handler, call if_stop(, 0)
instead of if_stop(, 1), because the latter is superfluous
(bus- and driver-suspension hooks will 'disable' the NIC),
and it may cause recursion.
In the network-class resume handler, prevent infinite
recursion through if_init() by getting out early if we are
self-suspending (PMF_F_SELF).
rtw(4) improvements:
Destroy rtw(4) callouts when we detach it. Make rtw at
pci detachable. Print some more information with the "rx
frame too long" warning.
Remove activate() methods:
Get rid of rtw_activate() and ath_activate(). The device
activate() methods are not good for much these days.
Make ath at cardbus resume with crypto functions intact:
Introduce a boolean device property, "pmf-powerdown". If
pmf-powerdown is present and false, it indicates that a
bus back-end should not remove power from a device.
Honor this property in cardbus_child_suspend().
Set this property to 'false' in ath_attach(), since removing
power from an ath at cardbus seems to lobotomize the WPA
crypto engine. XXX Should the pmf-powerdown property
propagate toward the root of the device tree?
Miscellaneous ath(4) changes:
Warn if ath(4) tries to write crypto keys to suspended
hardware.
Reduce differences between FreeBSD and NetBSD in ath(4)
multicast filter setup.
Make ath_printrxbuf() print an rx descriptor's status &
key index, to help debug crypto errors.
Shorten a staircase in ath_ioctl(). Don't check for
ieee80211_ioctl() return code ERESTART, it never happens.
> Split device_t and softc for the NE2000 Ethernet chip and all its variants
> and attachments. Use device_t accessors, correct types, and ANSIfy when
> appropriate.
IFF_UP and IFF_RUNNING before running the 'disable' step, instead
of after. Soon I will handle the 'disable' step by calling into
PMF, which may call if_stop(, 0). Ordinarily, that is harmless.
This change lets the if_stop() routines exit early when they find
on entry that IFF_RUNNING is not set.
going through a syscall trap. These are currently useful for rumps.
As all the standard syscalls are not compiled into librump, mark
relevant ones with RUMP in syscalls.master. To do e.g. a mkdir
"system call" from a rump, one would call
rump_sys_mkdir("/dir", mode, &eval);
where the last value represents something to store errno into.
never sleep. Should fix PR/37245 by <yamt>.
- Fix a regression - dissalow catching of bound threads. Also, allow
migration of non-bound kthreads, this restriction seems pointless.
- Few micro-optimisations, misc.
Reintroduce more of a 'channel' concept in preparation for NP-IV support.
This gets rid of the chanA/chanB concept as the 2400 can have up to 128
virtual channels. Actually, with MID firmware you can also have the 2200
and 2300 support 'channels, but they do it with an FL-Port topology.
Because FC cards can now have 'channels', just about every support
function for fibre channel had to be redone to have a channel index
as well. Rototill isp_ioctl.h for channel stuff as well.
Pick up a lot of work about fabric management (hopefully better) and keep
work in place that will allow for dynamic attachment/detachment of devices
(if I can figure out how to make the midlayer support it).
Merge the target code with external trees. Eventually it might even
be sorted out on NetBSD.
Update some firmware stuff.