Bill,
Your patch worked perfectly. THANK YOU!
By the way, I'd be happy to fedex a 3c905B to
you for your use in testing these sorts of things
if that would be helpful. We have a fairly large
commitment to this card now (40+) and I'd do this
happily to facilitate continuing performance
enhancements or other improvements to it.
Sincerely,
-Troy Cobb
Circle Net, Inc.
http://www.circle.net
-Original Message-
From: wp...@ctr.columbia.edu [mailto:wp...@ctr.columbia.edu]
My apologies for not replying to you on this sooner; it
took me a while
to locate a machine with which I could do some testing (all
the 3c905B
hardware I have is in the form of embedded chipsets in Dell desktop
machines, and they've been moving around on me a lot).
This does NOT happen on the:
xl0: 3Com 3c905 Fast Etherlink XL 10/100BaseTX rev 0x00
int a irq 10 on
I think I found the problem. Currently, xl_stop() and xl_init() both
issue RX and TX resets. Seems logical doesn't it? I mean,
the purpose
of xl_init() is to put the NIC into a known good state, and
the purpose
of xl_stop() is to slap it in the face and make it shut up ASAP. The
difference between the 3c905 and the 3c905B (well, the important
difference in this case) is that the 3c905B's chipset has a
built-in PHY,
while the 3c905 requires an external one (3Com uses a
DP83840A for the
3c905 boards, judging by the one sample 3c905 card I have).
Apparently,
issuing the RX and TX reset commands on the 3c905B causes it to also
reset the PHY, which causes the PHY to restart its
autonegotiation session
with its link partner. It takes a few seconds for the
autoneg session to
finish, and during this time the 3c905B stops receiving packets.
This doesn't happen on the 3c905 because issuing the RX and TX reset
commands does not have any affect on the external PHY: the only way
to reset the PHY is by writing to the PHY's basic mode
control register
via the MII management interface.
I'm including a patch which should fix this problem. It
just disables
the code that does the reset in both xl_stop() and xl_init(). Please
try this and let me know if it helps.
To apply the patch, do the following:
- Make sure you have the kernel source code installed under
/usr/src.
- Save this message to a file, i.e. /tmp/xl.patch
- Become root.
- Run the following commands:
# cd /sys/pci
# patch /tmp/xl.patch
- Compile a new kernel and boot it.
This patch was generated using a version of if_xl.c from
FreeBSD-current,
but it should work on any version of the driver with only a
couple of
mild warnings.
-Bill
--
=
-Bill Paul(212) 854-6020 | System Manager,
Master of Unix-Fu
Work: wp...@ctr.columbia.edu | Center for
Telecommunications Research
Home: wp...@skynet.ctr.columbia.edu | Columbia University,
New York City
=
Mulder, toads just fell from the sky! I guess their
parachutes didn't open.
=
*** ../CVSWORK/sys_pci/if_xl.c Mon Feb 1 16:25:52 1999
--- if_xl.c Thu Feb 11 18:34:39 1999
***
*** 2363,2373
--- 2363,2375
for (i = 0; i 3; i++)
CSR_WRITE_2(sc, XL_W2_STATION_MASK_LO + (i * 2), 0);
+ #ifdef notdef
/* Reset TX and RX. */
CSR_WRITE_2(sc, XL_COMMAND, XL_CMD_RX_RESET);
xl_wait(sc);
CSR_WRITE_2(sc, XL_COMMAND, XL_CMD_TX_RESET);
xl_wait(sc);
+ #endif
/* Init circular RX list. */
if (xl_list_rx_init(sc) == ENOBUFS) {
***
*** 2715,2724
--- 2717,2728
CSR_WRITE_2(sc, XL_COMMAND, XL_CMD_TX_DISABLE);
CSR_WRITE_2(sc, XL_COMMAND, XL_CMD_COAX_STOP);
DELAY(800);
+ #ifdef notdef
CSR_WRITE_2(sc, XL_COMMAND, XL_CMD_RX_RESET);
xl_wait(sc);
CSR_WRITE_2(sc, XL_COMMAND, XL_CMD_TX_RESET);
xl_wait(sc);
+ #endif
CSR_WRITE_2(sc, XL_COMMAND, XL_CMD_INTR_ACK|XL_STAT_INTLATCH);
/* Stop the stats updater. */
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