| // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-1.0+ |
| |
| /* 8390.c: A general NS8390 ethernet driver core for linux. */ |
| /* |
| Written 1992-94 by Donald Becker. |
| |
| Copyright 1993 United States Government as represented by the |
| Director, National Security Agency. |
| |
| The author may be reached as becker@scyld.com, or C/O |
| Scyld Computing Corporation |
| 410 Severn Ave., Suite 210 |
| Annapolis MD 21403 |
| |
| |
| This is the chip-specific code for many 8390-based ethernet adaptors. |
| This is not a complete driver, it must be combined with board-specific |
| code such as ne.c, wd.c, 3c503.c, etc. |
| |
| Seeing how at least eight drivers use this code, (not counting the |
| PCMCIA ones either) it is easy to break some card by what seems like |
| a simple innocent change. Please contact me or Donald if you think |
| you have found something that needs changing. -- PG |
| |
| |
| Changelog: |
| |
| Paul Gortmaker : remove set_bit lock, other cleanups. |
| Paul Gortmaker : add ei_get_8390_hdr() so we can pass skb's to |
| ei_block_input() for eth_io_copy_and_sum(). |
| Paul Gortmaker : exchange static int ei_pingpong for a #define, |
| also add better Tx error handling. |
| Paul Gortmaker : rewrite Rx overrun handling as per NS specs. |
| Alexey Kuznetsov : use the 8390's six bit hash multicast filter. |
| Paul Gortmaker : tweak ANK's above multicast changes a bit. |
| Paul Gortmaker : update packet statistics for v2.1.x |
| Alan Cox : support arbitrary stupid port mappings on the |
| 68K Macintosh. Support >16bit I/O spaces |
| Paul Gortmaker : add kmod support for auto-loading of the 8390 |
| module by all drivers that require it. |
| Alan Cox : Spinlocking work, added 'BUG_83C690' |
| Paul Gortmaker : Separate out Tx timeout code from Tx path. |
| Paul Gortmaker : Remove old unused single Tx buffer code. |
| Hayato Fujiwara : Add m32r support. |
| Paul Gortmaker : use skb_padto() instead of stack scratch area |
| |
| Sources: |
| The National Semiconductor LAN Databook, and the 3Com 3c503 databook. |
| |
| */ |
| |
| #include <linux/build_bug.h> |
| #include <linux/module.h> |
| #include <linux/kernel.h> |
| #include <linux/jiffies.h> |
| #include <linux/fs.h> |
| #include <linux/types.h> |
| #include <linux/string.h> |
| #include <linux/bitops.h> |
| #include <linux/uaccess.h> |
| #include <linux/io.h> |
| #include <asm/irq.h> |
| #include <linux/delay.h> |
| #include <linux/errno.h> |
| #include <linux/fcntl.h> |
| #include <linux/in.h> |
| #include <linux/interrupt.h> |
| #include <linux/init.h> |
| #include <linux/crc32.h> |
| |
| #include <linux/netdevice.h> |
| #include <linux/etherdevice.h> |
| |
| #define NS8390_CORE |
| #include "8390.h" |
| |
| #define BUG_83C690 |
| |
| /* These are the operational function interfaces to board-specific |
| routines. |
| void reset_8390(struct net_device *dev) |
| Resets the board associated with DEV, including a hardware reset of |
| the 8390. This is only called when there is a transmit timeout, and |
| it is always followed by 8390_init(). |
| void block_output(struct net_device *dev, int count, const unsigned char *buf, |
| int start_page) |
| Write the COUNT bytes of BUF to the packet buffer at START_PAGE. The |
| "page" value uses the 8390's 256-byte pages. |
| void get_8390_hdr(struct net_device *dev, struct e8390_hdr *hdr, int ring_page) |
| Read the 4 byte, page aligned 8390 header. *If* there is a |
| subsequent read, it will be of the rest of the packet. |
| void block_input(struct net_device *dev, int count, struct sk_buff *skb, int ring_offset) |
| Read COUNT bytes from the packet buffer into the skb data area. Start |
| reading from RING_OFFSET, the address as the 8390 sees it. This will always |
| follow the read of the 8390 header. |
| */ |
| #define ei_reset_8390 (ei_local->reset_8390) |
| #define ei_block_output (ei_local->block_output) |
| #define ei_block_input (ei_local->block_input) |
| #define ei_get_8390_hdr (ei_local->get_8390_hdr) |
| |
| /* Index to functions. */ |
| static void ei_tx_intr(struct net_device *dev); |
| static void ei_tx_err(struct net_device *dev); |
| static void ei_receive(struct net_device *dev); |
| static void ei_rx_overrun(struct net_device *dev); |
| |
| /* Routines generic to NS8390-based boards. */ |
| static void NS8390_trigger_send(struct net_device *dev, unsigned int length, |
| int start_page); |
| static void do_set_multicast_list(struct net_device *dev); |
| static void __NS8390_init(struct net_device *dev, int startp); |
| |
| static unsigned version_printed; |
| static int msg_enable; |
| static const int default_msg_level = (NETIF_MSG_DRV | NETIF_MSG_PROBE | NETIF_MSG_RX_ERR | |
| NETIF_MSG_TX_ERR); |
| module_param(msg_enable, int, 0444); |
| MODULE_PARM_DESC(msg_enable, "Debug message level (see linux/netdevice.h for bitmap)"); |
| |
| /* |
| * SMP and the 8390 setup. |
| * |
| * The 8390 isn't exactly designed to be multithreaded on RX/TX. There is |
| * a page register that controls bank and packet buffer access. We guard |
| * this with ei_local->page_lock. Nobody should assume or set the page other |
| * than zero when the lock is not held. Lock holders must restore page 0 |
| * before unlocking. Even pure readers must take the lock to protect in |
| * page 0. |
| * |
| * To make life difficult the chip can also be very slow. We therefore can't |
| * just use spinlocks. For the longer lockups we disable the irq the device |
| * sits on and hold the lock. We must hold the lock because there is a dual |
| * processor case other than interrupts (get stats/set multicast list in |
| * parallel with each other and transmit). |
| * |
| * Note: in theory we can just disable the irq on the card _but_ there is |
| * a latency on SMP irq delivery. So we can easily go "disable irq" "sync irqs" |
| * enter lock, take the queued irq. So we waddle instead of flying. |
| * |
| * Finally by special arrangement for the purpose of being generally |
| * annoying the transmit function is called bh atomic. That places |
| * restrictions on the user context callers as disable_irq won't save |
| * them. |
| * |
| * Additional explanation of problems with locking by Alan Cox: |
| * |
| * "The author (me) didn't use spin_lock_irqsave because the slowness of the |
| * card means that approach caused horrible problems like losing serial data |
| * at 38400 baud on some chips. Remember many 8390 nics on PCI were ISA |
| * chips with FPGA front ends. |
| * |
| * Ok the logic behind the 8390 is very simple: |
| * |
| * Things to know |
| * - IRQ delivery is asynchronous to the PCI bus |
| * - Blocking the local CPU IRQ via spin locks was too slow |
| * - The chip has register windows needing locking work |
| * |
| * So the path was once (I say once as people appear to have changed it |
| * in the mean time and it now looks rather bogus if the changes to use |
| * disable_irq_nosync_irqsave are disabling the local IRQ) |
| * |
| * |
| * Take the page lock |
| * Mask the IRQ on chip |
| * Disable the IRQ (but not mask locally- someone seems to have |
| * broken this with the lock validator stuff) |
| * [This must be _nosync as the page lock may otherwise |
| * deadlock us] |
| * Drop the page lock and turn IRQs back on |
| * |
| * At this point an existing IRQ may still be running but we can't |
| * get a new one |
| * |
| * Take the lock (so we know the IRQ has terminated) but don't mask |
| * the IRQs on the processor |
| * Set irqlock [for debug] |
| * |
| * Transmit (slow as ****) |
| * |
| * re-enable the IRQ |
| * |
| * |
| * We have to use disable_irq because otherwise you will get delayed |
| * interrupts on the APIC bus deadlocking the transmit path. |
| * |
| * Quite hairy but the chip simply wasn't designed for SMP and you can't |
| * even ACK an interrupt without risking corrupting other parallel |
| * activities on the chip." [lkml, 25 Jul 2007] |
| */ |
| |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_open - Open/initialize the board. |
| * @dev: network device to initialize |
| * |
| * This routine goes all-out, setting everything |
| * up anew at each open, even though many of these registers should only |
| * need to be set once at boot. |
| */ |
| static int __ei_open(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long flags; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| |
| if (dev->watchdog_timeo <= 0) |
| dev->watchdog_timeo = TX_TIMEOUT; |
| |
| /* |
| * Grab the page lock so we own the register set, then call |
| * the init function. |
| */ |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| __NS8390_init(dev, 1); |
| /* Set the flag before we drop the lock, That way the IRQ arrives |
| after its set and we get no silly warnings */ |
| netif_start_queue(dev); |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| ei_local->irqlock = 0; |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_close - shut down network device |
| * @dev: network device to close |
| * |
| * Opposite of ei_open(). Only used when "ifconfig <devname> down" is done. |
| */ |
| static int __ei_close(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| unsigned long flags; |
| |
| /* |
| * Hold the page lock during close |
| */ |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| __NS8390_init(dev, 0); |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| netif_stop_queue(dev); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_tx_timeout - handle transmit time out condition |
| * @dev: network device which has apparently fallen asleep |
| * |
| * Called by kernel when device never acknowledges a transmit has |
| * completed (or failed) - i.e. never posted a Tx related interrupt. |
| */ |
| |
| static void __ei_tx_timeout(struct net_device *dev, unsigned int txqueue) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| int txsr, isr, tickssofar = jiffies - dev_trans_start(dev); |
| unsigned long flags; |
| |
| dev->stats.tx_errors++; |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| txsr = ei_inb(e8390_base+EN0_TSR); |
| isr = ei_inb(e8390_base+EN0_ISR); |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| |
| netdev_dbg(dev, "Tx timed out, %s TSR=%#2x, ISR=%#2x, t=%d\n", |
| (txsr & ENTSR_ABT) ? "excess collisions." : |
| (isr) ? "lost interrupt?" : "cable problem?", |
| txsr, isr, tickssofar); |
| |
| if (!isr && !dev->stats.tx_packets) { |
| /* The 8390 probably hasn't gotten on the cable yet. */ |
| ei_local->interface_num ^= 1; /* Try a different xcvr. */ |
| } |
| |
| /* Ugly but a reset can be slow, yet must be protected */ |
| |
| disable_irq_nosync_lockdep(dev->irq); |
| spin_lock(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| |
| /* Try to restart the card. Perhaps the user has fixed something. */ |
| ei_reset_8390(dev); |
| __NS8390_init(dev, 1); |
| |
| spin_unlock(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| enable_irq_lockdep(dev->irq); |
| netif_wake_queue(dev); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_start_xmit - begin packet transmission |
| * @skb: packet to be sent |
| * @dev: network device to which packet is sent |
| * |
| * Sends a packet to an 8390 network device. |
| */ |
| |
| static netdev_tx_t __ei_start_xmit(struct sk_buff *skb, |
| struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| int send_length = skb->len, output_page; |
| unsigned long flags; |
| char buf[ETH_ZLEN]; |
| char *data = skb->data; |
| |
| if (skb->len < ETH_ZLEN) { |
| memset(buf, 0, ETH_ZLEN); /* more efficient than doing just the needed bits */ |
| memcpy(buf, data, skb->len); |
| send_length = ETH_ZLEN; |
| data = buf; |
| } |
| |
| /* Mask interrupts from the ethercard. |
| SMP: We have to grab the lock here otherwise the IRQ handler |
| on another CPU can flip window and race the IRQ mask set. We end |
| up trashing the mcast filter not disabling irqs if we don't lock */ |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| ei_outb_p(0x00, e8390_base + EN0_IMR); |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Slow phase with lock held. |
| */ |
| |
| disable_irq_nosync_lockdep_irqsave(dev->irq, &flags); |
| |
| spin_lock(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| |
| ei_local->irqlock = 1; |
| |
| /* |
| * We have two Tx slots available for use. Find the first free |
| * slot, and then perform some sanity checks. With two Tx bufs, |
| * you get very close to transmitting back-to-back packets. With |
| * only one Tx buf, the transmitter sits idle while you reload the |
| * card, leaving a substantial gap between each transmitted packet. |
| */ |
| |
| if (ei_local->tx1 == 0) { |
| output_page = ei_local->tx_start_page; |
| ei_local->tx1 = send_length; |
| if ((netif_msg_tx_queued(ei_local)) && |
| ei_local->tx2 > 0) |
| netdev_dbg(dev, |
| "idle transmitter tx2=%d, lasttx=%d, txing=%d\n", |
| ei_local->tx2, ei_local->lasttx, ei_local->txing); |
| } else if (ei_local->tx2 == 0) { |
| output_page = ei_local->tx_start_page + TX_PAGES/2; |
| ei_local->tx2 = send_length; |
| if ((netif_msg_tx_queued(ei_local)) && |
| ei_local->tx1 > 0) |
| netdev_dbg(dev, |
| "idle transmitter, tx1=%d, lasttx=%d, txing=%d\n", |
| ei_local->tx1, ei_local->lasttx, ei_local->txing); |
| } else { /* We should never get here. */ |
| netif_dbg(ei_local, tx_err, dev, |
| "No Tx buffers free! tx1=%d tx2=%d last=%d\n", |
| ei_local->tx1, ei_local->tx2, ei_local->lasttx); |
| ei_local->irqlock = 0; |
| netif_stop_queue(dev); |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_ALL, e8390_base + EN0_IMR); |
| spin_unlock(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| enable_irq_lockdep_irqrestore(dev->irq, &flags); |
| dev->stats.tx_errors++; |
| return NETDEV_TX_BUSY; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Okay, now upload the packet and trigger a send if the transmitter |
| * isn't already sending. If it is busy, the interrupt handler will |
| * trigger the send later, upon receiving a Tx done interrupt. |
| */ |
| |
| ei_block_output(dev, send_length, data, output_page); |
| |
| if (!ei_local->txing) { |
| ei_local->txing = 1; |
| NS8390_trigger_send(dev, send_length, output_page); |
| if (output_page == ei_local->tx_start_page) { |
| ei_local->tx1 = -1; |
| ei_local->lasttx = -1; |
| } else { |
| ei_local->tx2 = -1; |
| ei_local->lasttx = -2; |
| } |
| } else |
| ei_local->txqueue++; |
| |
| if (ei_local->tx1 && ei_local->tx2) |
| netif_stop_queue(dev); |
| else |
| netif_start_queue(dev); |
| |
| /* Turn 8390 interrupts back on. */ |
| ei_local->irqlock = 0; |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_ALL, e8390_base + EN0_IMR); |
| |
| spin_unlock(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| enable_irq_lockdep_irqrestore(dev->irq, &flags); |
| skb_tx_timestamp(skb); |
| dev_consume_skb_any(skb); |
| dev->stats.tx_bytes += send_length; |
| |
| return NETDEV_TX_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_interrupt - handle the interrupts from an 8390 |
| * @irq: interrupt number |
| * @dev_id: a pointer to the net_device |
| * |
| * Handle the ether interface interrupts. We pull packets from |
| * the 8390 via the card specific functions and fire them at the networking |
| * stack. We also handle transmit completions and wake the transmit path if |
| * necessary. We also update the counters and do other housekeeping as |
| * needed. |
| */ |
| |
| static irqreturn_t __ei_interrupt(int irq, void *dev_id) |
| { |
| struct net_device *dev = dev_id; |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| int interrupts, nr_serviced = 0; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| |
| /* |
| * Protect the irq test too. |
| */ |
| |
| spin_lock(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| |
| if (ei_local->irqlock) { |
| /* |
| * This might just be an interrupt for a PCI device sharing |
| * this line |
| */ |
| netdev_err(dev, "Interrupted while interrupts are masked! isr=%#2x imr=%#2x\n", |
| ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN0_ISR), |
| ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN0_IMR)); |
| spin_unlock(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| return IRQ_NONE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Change to page 0 and read the intr status reg. */ |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| netif_dbg(ei_local, intr, dev, "interrupt(isr=%#2.2x)\n", |
| ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN0_ISR)); |
| |
| /* !!Assumption!! -- we stay in page 0. Don't break this. */ |
| while ((interrupts = ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN0_ISR)) != 0 && |
| ++nr_serviced < MAX_SERVICE) { |
| if (!netif_running(dev)) { |
| netdev_warn(dev, "interrupt from stopped card\n"); |
| /* rmk - acknowledge the interrupts */ |
| ei_outb_p(interrupts, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); |
| interrupts = 0; |
| break; |
| } |
| if (interrupts & ENISR_OVER) |
| ei_rx_overrun(dev); |
| else if (interrupts & (ENISR_RX+ENISR_RX_ERR)) { |
| /* Got a good (?) packet. */ |
| ei_receive(dev); |
| } |
| /* Push the next to-transmit packet through. */ |
| if (interrupts & ENISR_TX) |
| ei_tx_intr(dev); |
| else if (interrupts & ENISR_TX_ERR) |
| ei_tx_err(dev); |
| |
| if (interrupts & ENISR_COUNTERS) { |
| dev->stats.rx_frame_errors += ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN0_COUNTER0); |
| dev->stats.rx_crc_errors += ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN0_COUNTER1); |
| dev->stats.rx_missed_errors += ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN0_COUNTER2); |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_COUNTERS, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); /* Ack intr. */ |
| } |
| |
| /* Ignore any RDC interrupts that make it back to here. */ |
| if (interrupts & ENISR_RDC) |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_RDC, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); |
| |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0+E8390_START, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| } |
| |
| if (interrupts && (netif_msg_intr(ei_local))) { |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0+E8390_START, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| if (nr_serviced >= MAX_SERVICE) { |
| /* 0xFF is valid for a card removal */ |
| if (interrupts != 0xFF) |
| netdev_warn(dev, "Too much work at interrupt, status %#2.2x\n", |
| interrupts); |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_ALL, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); /* Ack. most intrs. */ |
| } else { |
| netdev_warn(dev, "unknown interrupt %#2x\n", interrupts); |
| ei_outb_p(0xff, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); /* Ack. all intrs. */ |
| } |
| } |
| spin_unlock(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| return IRQ_RETVAL(nr_serviced > 0); |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_NET_POLL_CONTROLLER |
| static void __ei_poll(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| disable_irq(dev->irq); |
| __ei_interrupt(dev->irq, dev); |
| enable_irq(dev->irq); |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_tx_err - handle transmitter error |
| * @dev: network device which threw the exception |
| * |
| * A transmitter error has happened. Most likely excess collisions (which |
| * is a fairly normal condition). If the error is one where the Tx will |
| * have been aborted, we try and send another one right away, instead of |
| * letting the failed packet sit and collect dust in the Tx buffer. This |
| * is a much better solution as it avoids kernel based Tx timeouts, and |
| * an unnecessary card reset. |
| * |
| * Called with lock held. |
| */ |
| |
| static void ei_tx_err(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| /* ei_local is used on some platforms via the EI_SHIFT macro */ |
| struct ei_device *ei_local __maybe_unused = netdev_priv(dev); |
| unsigned char txsr = ei_inb_p(e8390_base+EN0_TSR); |
| unsigned char tx_was_aborted = txsr & (ENTSR_ABT+ENTSR_FU); |
| |
| #ifdef VERBOSE_ERROR_DUMP |
| netdev_dbg(dev, "transmitter error (%#2x):", txsr); |
| if (txsr & ENTSR_ABT) |
| pr_cont(" excess-collisions "); |
| if (txsr & ENTSR_ND) |
| pr_cont(" non-deferral "); |
| if (txsr & ENTSR_CRS) |
| pr_cont(" lost-carrier "); |
| if (txsr & ENTSR_FU) |
| pr_cont(" FIFO-underrun "); |
| if (txsr & ENTSR_CDH) |
| pr_cont(" lost-heartbeat "); |
| pr_cont("\n"); |
| #endif |
| |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_TX_ERR, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); /* Ack intr. */ |
| |
| if (tx_was_aborted) |
| ei_tx_intr(dev); |
| else { |
| dev->stats.tx_errors++; |
| if (txsr & ENTSR_CRS) |
| dev->stats.tx_carrier_errors++; |
| if (txsr & ENTSR_CDH) |
| dev->stats.tx_heartbeat_errors++; |
| if (txsr & ENTSR_OWC) |
| dev->stats.tx_window_errors++; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_tx_intr - transmit interrupt handler |
| * @dev: network device for which tx intr is handled |
| * |
| * We have finished a transmit: check for errors and then trigger the next |
| * packet to be sent. Called with lock held. |
| */ |
| |
| static void ei_tx_intr(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| int status = ei_inb(e8390_base + EN0_TSR); |
| |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_TX, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); /* Ack intr. */ |
| |
| /* |
| * There are two Tx buffers, see which one finished, and trigger |
| * the send of another one if it exists. |
| */ |
| ei_local->txqueue--; |
| |
| if (ei_local->tx1 < 0) { |
| if (ei_local->lasttx != 1 && ei_local->lasttx != -1) |
| pr_err("%s: bogus last_tx_buffer %d, tx1=%d\n", |
| ei_local->name, ei_local->lasttx, ei_local->tx1); |
| ei_local->tx1 = 0; |
| if (ei_local->tx2 > 0) { |
| ei_local->txing = 1; |
| NS8390_trigger_send(dev, ei_local->tx2, ei_local->tx_start_page + 6); |
| netif_trans_update(dev); |
| ei_local->tx2 = -1; |
| ei_local->lasttx = 2; |
| } else { |
| ei_local->lasttx = 20; |
| ei_local->txing = 0; |
| } |
| } else if (ei_local->tx2 < 0) { |
| if (ei_local->lasttx != 2 && ei_local->lasttx != -2) |
| pr_err("%s: bogus last_tx_buffer %d, tx2=%d\n", |
| ei_local->name, ei_local->lasttx, ei_local->tx2); |
| ei_local->tx2 = 0; |
| if (ei_local->tx1 > 0) { |
| ei_local->txing = 1; |
| NS8390_trigger_send(dev, ei_local->tx1, ei_local->tx_start_page); |
| netif_trans_update(dev); |
| ei_local->tx1 = -1; |
| ei_local->lasttx = 1; |
| } else { |
| ei_local->lasttx = 10; |
| ei_local->txing = 0; |
| } |
| } /* else |
| netdev_warn(dev, "unexpected TX-done interrupt, lasttx=%d\n", |
| ei_local->lasttx); |
| */ |
| |
| /* Minimize Tx latency: update the statistics after we restart TXing. */ |
| if (status & ENTSR_COL) |
| dev->stats.collisions++; |
| if (status & ENTSR_PTX) |
| dev->stats.tx_packets++; |
| else { |
| dev->stats.tx_errors++; |
| if (status & ENTSR_ABT) { |
| dev->stats.tx_aborted_errors++; |
| dev->stats.collisions += 16; |
| } |
| if (status & ENTSR_CRS) |
| dev->stats.tx_carrier_errors++; |
| if (status & ENTSR_FU) |
| dev->stats.tx_fifo_errors++; |
| if (status & ENTSR_CDH) |
| dev->stats.tx_heartbeat_errors++; |
| if (status & ENTSR_OWC) |
| dev->stats.tx_window_errors++; |
| } |
| netif_wake_queue(dev); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_receive - receive some packets |
| * @dev: network device with which receive will be run |
| * |
| * We have a good packet(s), get it/them out of the buffers. |
| * Called with lock held. |
| */ |
| |
| static void ei_receive(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| unsigned char rxing_page, this_frame, next_frame; |
| unsigned short current_offset; |
| int rx_pkt_count = 0; |
| struct e8390_pkt_hdr rx_frame; |
| int num_rx_pages = ei_local->stop_page-ei_local->rx_start_page; |
| |
| while (++rx_pkt_count < 10) { |
| int pkt_len, pkt_stat; |
| |
| /* Get the rx page (incoming packet pointer). */ |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE1, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| rxing_page = ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN1_CURPAG); |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| |
| /* Remove one frame from the ring. Boundary is always a page behind. */ |
| this_frame = ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN0_BOUNDARY) + 1; |
| if (this_frame >= ei_local->stop_page) |
| this_frame = ei_local->rx_start_page; |
| |
| /* Someday we'll omit the previous, iff we never get this message. |
| (There is at least one clone claimed to have a problem.) |
| |
| Keep quiet if it looks like a card removal. One problem here |
| is that some clones crash in roughly the same way. |
| */ |
| if ((netif_msg_rx_status(ei_local)) && |
| this_frame != ei_local->current_page && |
| (this_frame != 0x0 || rxing_page != 0xFF)) |
| netdev_err(dev, |
| "mismatched read page pointers %2x vs %2x\n", |
| this_frame, ei_local->current_page); |
| |
| if (this_frame == rxing_page) /* Read all the frames? */ |
| break; /* Done for now */ |
| |
| current_offset = this_frame << 8; |
| ei_get_8390_hdr(dev, &rx_frame, this_frame); |
| |
| pkt_len = rx_frame.count - sizeof(struct e8390_pkt_hdr); |
| pkt_stat = rx_frame.status; |
| |
| next_frame = this_frame + 1 + ((pkt_len+4)>>8); |
| |
| /* Check for bogosity warned by 3c503 book: the status byte is never |
| written. This happened a lot during testing! This code should be |
| cleaned up someday. */ |
| if (rx_frame.next != next_frame && |
| rx_frame.next != next_frame + 1 && |
| rx_frame.next != next_frame - num_rx_pages && |
| rx_frame.next != next_frame + 1 - num_rx_pages) { |
| ei_local->current_page = rxing_page; |
| ei_outb(ei_local->current_page-1, e8390_base+EN0_BOUNDARY); |
| dev->stats.rx_errors++; |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| if (pkt_len < 60 || pkt_len > 1518) { |
| netif_dbg(ei_local, rx_status, dev, |
| "bogus packet size: %d, status=%#2x nxpg=%#2x\n", |
| rx_frame.count, rx_frame.status, |
| rx_frame.next); |
| dev->stats.rx_errors++; |
| dev->stats.rx_length_errors++; |
| } else if ((pkt_stat & 0x0F) == ENRSR_RXOK) { |
| struct sk_buff *skb; |
| |
| skb = netdev_alloc_skb(dev, pkt_len + 2); |
| if (skb == NULL) { |
| netif_err(ei_local, rx_err, dev, |
| "Couldn't allocate a sk_buff of size %d\n", |
| pkt_len); |
| dev->stats.rx_dropped++; |
| break; |
| } else { |
| skb_reserve(skb, 2); /* IP headers on 16 byte boundaries */ |
| skb_put(skb, pkt_len); /* Make room */ |
| ei_block_input(dev, pkt_len, skb, current_offset + sizeof(rx_frame)); |
| skb->protocol = eth_type_trans(skb, dev); |
| if (!skb_defer_rx_timestamp(skb)) |
| netif_rx(skb); |
| dev->stats.rx_packets++; |
| dev->stats.rx_bytes += pkt_len; |
| if (pkt_stat & ENRSR_PHY) |
| dev->stats.multicast++; |
| } |
| } else { |
| netif_err(ei_local, rx_err, dev, |
| "bogus packet: status=%#2x nxpg=%#2x size=%d\n", |
| rx_frame.status, rx_frame.next, |
| rx_frame.count); |
| dev->stats.rx_errors++; |
| /* NB: The NIC counts CRC, frame and missed errors. */ |
| if (pkt_stat & ENRSR_FO) |
| dev->stats.rx_fifo_errors++; |
| } |
| next_frame = rx_frame.next; |
| |
| /* This _should_ never happen: it's here for avoiding bad clones. */ |
| if (next_frame >= ei_local->stop_page) { |
| netdev_notice(dev, "next frame inconsistency, %#2x\n", |
| next_frame); |
| next_frame = ei_local->rx_start_page; |
| } |
| ei_local->current_page = next_frame; |
| ei_outb_p(next_frame-1, e8390_base+EN0_BOUNDARY); |
| } |
| |
| /* We used to also ack ENISR_OVER here, but that would sometimes mask |
| a real overrun, leaving the 8390 in a stopped state with rec'vr off. */ |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_RX+ENISR_RX_ERR, e8390_base+EN0_ISR); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ei_rx_overrun - handle receiver overrun |
| * @dev: network device which threw exception |
| * |
| * We have a receiver overrun: we have to kick the 8390 to get it started |
| * again. Problem is that you have to kick it exactly as NS prescribes in |
| * the updated datasheets, or "the NIC may act in an unpredictable manner." |
| * This includes causing "the NIC to defer indefinitely when it is stopped |
| * on a busy network." Ugh. |
| * Called with lock held. Don't call this with the interrupts off or your |
| * computer will hate you - it takes 10ms or so. |
| */ |
| |
| static void ei_rx_overrun(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| unsigned char was_txing, must_resend = 0; |
| /* ei_local is used on some platforms via the EI_SHIFT macro */ |
| struct ei_device *ei_local __maybe_unused = netdev_priv(dev); |
| |
| /* |
| * Record whether a Tx was in progress and then issue the |
| * stop command. |
| */ |
| was_txing = ei_inb_p(e8390_base+E8390_CMD) & E8390_TRANS; |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0+E8390_STOP, e8390_base+E8390_CMD); |
| |
| netif_dbg(ei_local, rx_err, dev, "Receiver overrun\n"); |
| dev->stats.rx_over_errors++; |
| |
| /* |
| * Wait a full Tx time (1.2ms) + some guard time, NS says 1.6ms total. |
| * Early datasheets said to poll the reset bit, but now they say that |
| * it "is not a reliable indicator and subsequently should be ignored." |
| * We wait at least 10ms. |
| */ |
| |
| mdelay(10); |
| |
| /* |
| * Reset RBCR[01] back to zero as per magic incantation. |
| */ |
| ei_outb_p(0x00, e8390_base+EN0_RCNTLO); |
| ei_outb_p(0x00, e8390_base+EN0_RCNTHI); |
| |
| /* |
| * See if any Tx was interrupted or not. According to NS, this |
| * step is vital, and skipping it will cause no end of havoc. |
| */ |
| |
| if (was_txing) { |
| unsigned char tx_completed = ei_inb_p(e8390_base+EN0_ISR) & (ENISR_TX+ENISR_TX_ERR); |
| if (!tx_completed) |
| must_resend = 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Have to enter loopback mode and then restart the NIC before |
| * you are allowed to slurp packets up off the ring. |
| */ |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_TXOFF, e8390_base + EN0_TXCR); |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA + E8390_PAGE0 + E8390_START, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| |
| /* |
| * Clear the Rx ring of all the debris, and ack the interrupt. |
| */ |
| ei_receive(dev); |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_OVER, e8390_base+EN0_ISR); |
| |
| /* |
| * Leave loopback mode, and resend any packet that got stopped. |
| */ |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_TXCONFIG, e8390_base + EN0_TXCR); |
| if (must_resend) |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA + E8390_PAGE0 + E8390_START + E8390_TRANS, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Collect the stats. This is called unlocked and from several contexts. |
| */ |
| |
| static struct net_device_stats *__ei_get_stats(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long ioaddr = dev->base_addr; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| unsigned long flags; |
| |
| /* If the card is stopped, just return the present stats. */ |
| if (!netif_running(dev)) |
| return &dev->stats; |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| /* Read the counter registers, assuming we are in page 0. */ |
| dev->stats.rx_frame_errors += ei_inb_p(ioaddr + EN0_COUNTER0); |
| dev->stats.rx_crc_errors += ei_inb_p(ioaddr + EN0_COUNTER1); |
| dev->stats.rx_missed_errors += ei_inb_p(ioaddr + EN0_COUNTER2); |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| |
| return &dev->stats; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Form the 64 bit 8390 multicast table from the linked list of addresses |
| * associated with this dev structure. |
| */ |
| |
| static inline void make_mc_bits(u8 *bits, struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| struct netdev_hw_addr *ha; |
| |
| netdev_for_each_mc_addr(ha, dev) { |
| u32 crc = ether_crc(ETH_ALEN, ha->addr); |
| /* |
| * The 8390 uses the 6 most significant bits of the |
| * CRC to index the multicast table. |
| */ |
| bits[crc>>29] |= (1<<((crc>>26)&7)); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * do_set_multicast_list - set/clear multicast filter |
| * @dev: net device for which multicast filter is adjusted |
| * |
| * Set or clear the multicast filter for this adaptor. May be called |
| * from a BH in 2.1.x. Must be called with lock held. |
| */ |
| |
| static void do_set_multicast_list(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| int i; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| |
| if (!(dev->flags&(IFF_PROMISC|IFF_ALLMULTI))) { |
| memset(ei_local->mcfilter, 0, 8); |
| if (!netdev_mc_empty(dev)) |
| make_mc_bits(ei_local->mcfilter, dev); |
| } else |
| memset(ei_local->mcfilter, 0xFF, 8); /* mcast set to accept-all */ |
| |
| /* |
| * DP8390 manuals don't specify any magic sequence for altering |
| * the multicast regs on an already running card. To be safe, we |
| * ensure multicast mode is off prior to loading up the new hash |
| * table. If this proves to be not enough, we can always resort |
| * to stopping the NIC, loading the table and then restarting. |
| * |
| * Bug Alert! The MC regs on the SMC 83C690 (SMC Elite and SMC |
| * Elite16) appear to be write-only. The NS 8390 data sheet lists |
| * them as r/w so this is a bug. The SMC 83C790 (SMC Ultra and |
| * Ultra32 EISA) appears to have this bug fixed. |
| */ |
| |
| if (netif_running(dev)) |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_RXCONFIG, e8390_base + EN0_RXCR); |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA + E8390_PAGE1, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) { |
| ei_outb_p(ei_local->mcfilter[i], e8390_base + EN1_MULT_SHIFT(i)); |
| #ifndef BUG_83C690 |
| if (ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN1_MULT_SHIFT(i)) != ei_local->mcfilter[i]) |
| netdev_err(dev, "Multicast filter read/write mismap %d\n", |
| i); |
| #endif |
| } |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA + E8390_PAGE0, e8390_base + E8390_CMD); |
| |
| if (dev->flags&IFF_PROMISC) |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_RXCONFIG | 0x18, e8390_base + EN0_RXCR); |
| else if (dev->flags & IFF_ALLMULTI || !netdev_mc_empty(dev)) |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_RXCONFIG | 0x08, e8390_base + EN0_RXCR); |
| else |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_RXCONFIG, e8390_base + EN0_RXCR); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Called without lock held. This is invoked from user context and may |
| * be parallel to just about everything else. Its also fairly quick and |
| * not called too often. Must protect against both bh and irq users |
| */ |
| |
| static void __ei_set_multicast_list(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| unsigned long flags; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| do_set_multicast_list(dev); |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ei_local->page_lock, flags); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ethdev_setup - init rest of 8390 device struct |
| * @dev: network device structure to init |
| * |
| * Initialize the rest of the 8390 device structure. Do NOT __init |
| * this, as it is used by 8390 based modular drivers too. |
| */ |
| |
| static void ethdev_setup(struct net_device *dev) |
| { |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| |
| ether_setup(dev); |
| |
| spin_lock_init(&ei_local->page_lock); |
| |
| ei_local->msg_enable = netif_msg_init(msg_enable, default_msg_level); |
| |
| if (netif_msg_drv(ei_local) && (version_printed++ == 0)) |
| pr_info("%s", version); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * alloc_ei_netdev - alloc_etherdev counterpart for 8390 |
| * @size: extra bytes to allocate |
| * |
| * Allocate 8390-specific net_device. |
| */ |
| static struct net_device *____alloc_ei_netdev(int size) |
| { |
| return alloc_netdev(sizeof(struct ei_device) + size, "eth%d", |
| NET_NAME_UNKNOWN, ethdev_setup); |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| /* This page of functions should be 8390 generic */ |
| /* Follow National Semi's recommendations for initializing the "NIC". */ |
| |
| /** |
| * NS8390_init - initialize 8390 hardware |
| * @dev: network device to initialize |
| * @startp: boolean. non-zero value to initiate chip processing |
| * |
| * Must be called with lock held. |
| */ |
| |
| static void __NS8390_init(struct net_device *dev, int startp) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local = netdev_priv(dev); |
| int i; |
| int endcfg = ei_local->word16 |
| ? (0x48 | ENDCFG_WTS | (ei_local->bigendian ? ENDCFG_BOS : 0)) |
| : 0x48; |
| |
| BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct e8390_pkt_hdr) != 4); |
| /* Follow National Semi's recommendations for initing the DP83902. */ |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0+E8390_STOP, e8390_base+E8390_CMD); /* 0x21 */ |
| ei_outb_p(endcfg, e8390_base + EN0_DCFG); /* 0x48 or 0x49 */ |
| /* Clear the remote byte count registers. */ |
| ei_outb_p(0x00, e8390_base + EN0_RCNTLO); |
| ei_outb_p(0x00, e8390_base + EN0_RCNTHI); |
| /* Set to monitor and loopback mode -- this is vital!. */ |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_RXOFF, e8390_base + EN0_RXCR); /* 0x20 */ |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_TXOFF, e8390_base + EN0_TXCR); /* 0x02 */ |
| /* Set the transmit page and receive ring. */ |
| ei_outb_p(ei_local->tx_start_page, e8390_base + EN0_TPSR); |
| ei_local->tx1 = ei_local->tx2 = 0; |
| ei_outb_p(ei_local->rx_start_page, e8390_base + EN0_STARTPG); |
| ei_outb_p(ei_local->stop_page-1, e8390_base + EN0_BOUNDARY); /* 3c503 says 0x3f,NS0x26*/ |
| ei_local->current_page = ei_local->rx_start_page; /* assert boundary+1 */ |
| ei_outb_p(ei_local->stop_page, e8390_base + EN0_STOPPG); |
| /* Clear the pending interrupts and mask. */ |
| ei_outb_p(0xFF, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); |
| ei_outb_p(0x00, e8390_base + EN0_IMR); |
| |
| /* Copy the station address into the DS8390 registers. */ |
| |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA + E8390_PAGE1 + E8390_STOP, e8390_base+E8390_CMD); /* 0x61 */ |
| for (i = 0; i < 6; i++) { |
| ei_outb_p(dev->dev_addr[i], e8390_base + EN1_PHYS_SHIFT(i)); |
| if ((netif_msg_probe(ei_local)) && |
| ei_inb_p(e8390_base + EN1_PHYS_SHIFT(i)) != dev->dev_addr[i]) |
| netdev_err(dev, |
| "Hw. address read/write mismap %d\n", i); |
| } |
| |
| ei_outb_p(ei_local->rx_start_page, e8390_base + EN1_CURPAG); |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0+E8390_STOP, e8390_base+E8390_CMD); |
| |
| ei_local->tx1 = ei_local->tx2 = 0; |
| ei_local->txing = 0; |
| |
| if (startp) { |
| ei_outb_p(0xff, e8390_base + EN0_ISR); |
| ei_outb_p(ENISR_ALL, e8390_base + EN0_IMR); |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0+E8390_START, e8390_base+E8390_CMD); |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_TXCONFIG, e8390_base + EN0_TXCR); /* xmit on. */ |
| /* 3c503 TechMan says rxconfig only after the NIC is started. */ |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_RXCONFIG, e8390_base + EN0_RXCR); /* rx on, */ |
| do_set_multicast_list(dev); /* (re)load the mcast table */ |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Trigger a transmit start, assuming the length is valid. |
| Always called with the page lock held */ |
| |
| static void NS8390_trigger_send(struct net_device *dev, unsigned int length, |
| int start_page) |
| { |
| unsigned long e8390_base = dev->base_addr; |
| struct ei_device *ei_local __attribute((unused)) = netdev_priv(dev); |
| |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_PAGE0, e8390_base+E8390_CMD); |
| |
| if (ei_inb_p(e8390_base + E8390_CMD) & E8390_TRANS) { |
| netdev_warn(dev, "trigger_send() called with the transmitter busy\n"); |
| return; |
| } |
| ei_outb_p(length & 0xff, e8390_base + EN0_TCNTLO); |
| ei_outb_p(length >> 8, e8390_base + EN0_TCNTHI); |
| ei_outb_p(start_page, e8390_base + EN0_TPSR); |
| ei_outb_p(E8390_NODMA+E8390_TRANS+E8390_START, e8390_base+E8390_CMD); |
| } |