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91 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
91 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
This file documents the driver changes needed to support use as part
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of a PXE stack.
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PROPER WAY
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==========
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1. The probe() routine.
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There are three additional fields that need to be filled in the nic
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structure: ioaddr, irqno and irq.
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ioaddr is the base I/O address and seems to be for information only;
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no use will be made of this value other than displaying it on the
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screen.
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irqno must be the IRQ number for the NIC. For PCI NICs this can
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simply be copied from pci->irq.
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irq is a function pointer, like poll and transmit. It must point to
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the driver's irq() function.
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2. The poll() routine.
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This must take an additional parameter: "int retrieve". Calling
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poll() with retrieve!=0 should function exactly as before. Calling
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poll() with retrieve==0 indicates that poll() should check for the
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presence of a packet to read, but must *not* read the packet. The
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packet will be read by a subsequent call to poll() with retrieve!=0.
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The easiest way to implement this is to insert the line
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if ( ! retrieve ) return 1;
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between the "is there a packet ready" and the "fetch packet" parts of
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the existing poll() routine.
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Care must be taken that a call to poll() with retrieve==0 does not
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clear the NIC's "packet ready" status indicator, otherwise the
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subsequent call to poll() with retrieve!=0 will fail because it will
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think that there is no packet to read.
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poll() should also acknowledge and clear the NIC's "packet received"
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interrupt. It does not need to worry about enabling/disabling
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interrupts; this is taken care of by calls to the driver's irq()
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routine.
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Etherboot will forcibly regenerate an interrupt if a packet remains
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pending after all interrupts have been acknowledged. You can
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therefore get away with having poll() just acknolwedge and clear all
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NIC interrupts, without particularly worrying about exactly when this
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should be done.
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3. The irq() routine.
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This is a new routine, with prototype
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void DRIVER_irq ( struct nic *nic, irq_action_t action );
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"action" takes one of three possible values: ENABLE, DISABLE or FORCE.
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ENABLE and DISABLE mean to enable/disable the NIC's "packet received"
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interrupt. FORCE means that the NIC should be forced to generate a
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fake "packet received" interrupt.
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If you are unable to implement FORCE, your NIC will not work when
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being driven via the UNDI interface under heavy network traffic
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conditions. Since Etherboot's UNDI driver (make bin/undi.zpxe) is the
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only program known to use this interface, it probably doesn't really
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matter.
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QUICK AND DIRTY WAY
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===================
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It is possible to use the system timer interrupt (IRQ 0) rather than a
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genuine NIC interrupt. Since there is a constant stream of timer
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interrupts, the net upshot is a whole load of spurious "NIC"
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interrupts that have no effect other than to cause unnecessary PXE API
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calls. It's inefficient but it works.
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To achieve this, simply set nic->irqno=0 in probe() and point nic->irq
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to a dummy routine that does nothing. Add the line
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if ( ! retrieve ) return 1;
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at the beginning of poll(), to prevent the packet being read (and
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discarded) when poll() is called with retrieve==0;
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UNCONVERTED DRIVERS
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===================
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Drivers that have not yet been converted should continue to function
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when not used as part of a PXE stack, although there will be a
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harmless compile-time warning about assignment from an incompatible
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pointer type in the probe() function, since the prototype for the
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poll() function is missing the "int retrieve" parameter.
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