android_kernel_xiaomi_sm8350/drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ani.c

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/*
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
* Copyright (c) 2008-2010 Atheros Communications Inc.
*
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
* purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
* copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
* WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
* ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
* WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
* ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
* OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
*/
#include "hw.h"
#include "hw-ops.h"
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
struct ani_ofdm_level_entry {
int spur_immunity_level;
int fir_step_level;
int ofdm_weak_signal_on;
};
/* values here are relative to the INI */
/*
* Legend:
*
* SI: Spur immunity
* FS: FIR Step
* WS: OFDM / CCK Weak Signal detection
* MRC-CCK: Maximal Ratio Combining for CCK
*/
static const struct ani_ofdm_level_entry ofdm_level_table[] = {
/* SI FS WS */
{ 0, 0, 1 }, /* lvl 0 */
{ 1, 1, 1 }, /* lvl 1 */
{ 2, 2, 1 }, /* lvl 2 */
{ 3, 2, 1 }, /* lvl 3 (default) */
{ 4, 3, 1 }, /* lvl 4 */
{ 5, 4, 1 }, /* lvl 5 */
{ 6, 5, 1 }, /* lvl 6 */
{ 7, 6, 1 }, /* lvl 7 */
{ 7, 7, 1 }, /* lvl 8 */
{ 7, 8, 0 } /* lvl 9 */
};
#define ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_NUM_LEVEL \
(sizeof(ofdm_level_table)/sizeof(ofdm_level_table[0]))
#define ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_MAX_LEVEL \
(ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_NUM_LEVEL-1)
#define ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_DEF_LEVEL \
3 /* default level - matches the INI settings */
/*
* MRC (Maximal Ratio Combining) has always been used with multi-antenna ofdm.
* With OFDM for single stream you just add up all antenna inputs, you're
* only interested in what you get after FFT. Signal aligment is also not
* required for OFDM because any phase difference adds up in the frequency
* domain.
*
* MRC requires extra work for use with CCK. You need to align the antenna
* signals from the different antenna before you can add the signals together.
* You need aligment of signals as CCK is in time domain, so addition can cancel
* your signal completely if phase is 180 degrees (think of adding sine waves).
* You also need to remove noise before the addition and this is where ANI
* MRC CCK comes into play. One of the antenna inputs may be stronger but
* lower SNR, so just adding after alignment can be dangerous.
*
* Regardless of alignment in time, the antenna signals add constructively after
* FFT and improve your reception. For more information:
*
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximal-ratio_combining
*/
struct ani_cck_level_entry {
int fir_step_level;
int mrc_cck_on;
};
static const struct ani_cck_level_entry cck_level_table[] = {
/* FS MRC-CCK */
{ 0, 1 }, /* lvl 0 */
{ 1, 1 }, /* lvl 1 */
{ 2, 1 }, /* lvl 2 (default) */
{ 3, 1 }, /* lvl 3 */
{ 4, 0 }, /* lvl 4 */
{ 5, 0 }, /* lvl 5 */
{ 6, 0 }, /* lvl 6 */
{ 7, 0 }, /* lvl 7 (only for high rssi) */
{ 8, 0 } /* lvl 8 (only for high rssi) */
};
#define ATH9K_ANI_CCK_NUM_LEVEL \
(sizeof(cck_level_table)/sizeof(cck_level_table[0]))
#define ATH9K_ANI_CCK_MAX_LEVEL \
(ATH9K_ANI_CCK_NUM_LEVEL-1)
#define ATH9K_ANI_CCK_MAX_LEVEL_LOW_RSSI \
(ATH9K_ANI_CCK_NUM_LEVEL-3)
#define ATH9K_ANI_CCK_DEF_LEVEL \
2 /* default level - matches the INI settings */
/* Private to ani.c */
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
static void ath9k_hw_ani_lower_immunity(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
ath9k_hw_private_ops(ah)->ani_lower_immunity(ah);
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
int ath9k_hw_get_ani_channel_idx(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(ah->ani); i++) {
if (ah->ani[i].c &&
ah->ani[i].c->channel == chan->channel)
return i;
if (ah->ani[i].c == NULL) {
ah->ani[i].c = chan;
return i;
}
}
ath_print(ath9k_hw_common(ah), ATH_DBG_ANI,
"No more channel states left. Using channel 0\n");
return 0;
}
static void ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_mib_stats *stats)
{
stats->ackrcv_bad += REG_READ(ah, AR_ACK_FAIL);
stats->rts_bad += REG_READ(ah, AR_RTS_FAIL);
stats->fcs_bad += REG_READ(ah, AR_FCS_FAIL);
stats->rts_good += REG_READ(ah, AR_RTS_OK);
stats->beacons += REG_READ(ah, AR_BEACON_CNT);
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
static void ath9k_ani_restart_old(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
aniState = ah->curani;
aniState->listenTime = 0;
if (aniState->ofdmTrigHigh > AR_PHY_COUNTMAX) {
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase = 0;
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"OFDM Trigger is too high for hw counters\n");
} else {
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase =
AR_PHY_COUNTMAX - aniState->ofdmTrigHigh;
}
if (aniState->cckTrigHigh > AR_PHY_COUNTMAX) {
aniState->cckPhyErrBase = 0;
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"CCK Trigger is too high for hw counters\n");
} else {
aniState->cckPhyErrBase =
AR_PHY_COUNTMAX - aniState->cckTrigHigh;
}
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"Writing ofdmbase=%u cckbase=%u\n",
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase,
aniState->cckPhyErrBase);
ENABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1, aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2, aniState->cckPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_1, AR_PHY_ERR_OFDM_TIMING);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_2, AR_PHY_ERR_CCK_TIMING);
REGWRITE_BUFFER_FLUSH(ah);
DISABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(ah, &ah->ah_mibStats);
aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount = 0;
aniState->cckPhyErrCount = 0;
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
static void ath9k_ani_restart_new(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
aniState = ah->curani;
aniState->listenTime = 0;
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase = 0;
aniState->cckPhyErrBase = 0;
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"Writing ofdmbase=%08x cckbase=%08x\n",
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase,
aniState->cckPhyErrBase);
ENABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1, aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2, aniState->cckPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_1, AR_PHY_ERR_OFDM_TIMING);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_2, AR_PHY_ERR_CCK_TIMING);
REGWRITE_BUFFER_FLUSH(ah);
DISABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(ah, &ah->ah_mibStats);
aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount = 0;
aniState->cckPhyErrCount = 0;
}
static void ath9k_hw_ani_ofdm_err_trigger_old(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ieee80211_conf *conf = &ath9k_hw_common(ah)->hw->conf;
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
int32_t rssi;
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
aniState = ah->curani;
if (aniState->noiseImmunityLevel < HAL_NOISE_IMMUNE_MAX) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_NOISE_IMMUNITY_LEVEL,
aniState->noiseImmunityLevel + 1)) {
return;
}
}
if (aniState->spurImmunityLevel < HAL_SPUR_IMMUNE_MAX) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL,
aniState->spurImmunityLevel + 1)) {
return;
}
}
if (ah->opmode == NL80211_IFTYPE_AP) {
if (aniState->firstepLevel < HAL_FIRST_STEP_MAX) {
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel + 1);
}
return;
}
rssi = BEACON_RSSI(ah);
if (rssi > aniState->rssiThrHigh) {
if (!aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION,
false)) {
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL, 0);
return;
}
}
if (aniState->firstepLevel < HAL_FIRST_STEP_MAX) {
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel + 1);
return;
}
} else if (rssi > aniState->rssiThrLow) {
if (aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION,
true);
if (aniState->firstepLevel < HAL_FIRST_STEP_MAX)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel + 1);
return;
} else {
if ((conf->channel->band == IEEE80211_BAND_2GHZ) &&
!conf_is_ht(conf)) {
if (!aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION,
false);
if (aniState->firstepLevel > 0)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL, 0);
return;
}
}
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
static void ath9k_hw_ani_cck_err_trigger_old(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ieee80211_conf *conf = &ath9k_hw_common(ah)->hw->conf;
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
int32_t rssi;
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
aniState = ah->curani;
if (aniState->noiseImmunityLevel < HAL_NOISE_IMMUNE_MAX) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_NOISE_IMMUNITY_LEVEL,
aniState->noiseImmunityLevel + 1)) {
return;
}
}
if (ah->opmode == NL80211_IFTYPE_AP) {
if (aniState->firstepLevel < HAL_FIRST_STEP_MAX) {
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel + 1);
}
return;
}
rssi = BEACON_RSSI(ah);
if (rssi > aniState->rssiThrLow) {
if (aniState->firstepLevel < HAL_FIRST_STEP_MAX)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel + 1);
} else {
if ((conf->channel->band == IEEE80211_BAND_2GHZ) &&
!conf_is_ht(conf)) {
if (aniState->firstepLevel > 0)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL, 0);
}
}
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
/* Adjust the OFDM Noise Immunity Level */
static void ath9k_hw_set_ofdm_nil(struct ath_hw *ah, u8 immunityLevel)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState = ah->curani;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
const struct ani_ofdm_level_entry *entry_ofdm;
const struct ani_cck_level_entry *entry_cck;
aniState->noiseFloor = BEACON_RSSI(ah);
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"**** ofdmlevel %d=>%d, rssi=%d[lo=%d hi=%d]\n",
aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel,
immunityLevel, aniState->noiseFloor,
aniState->rssiThrLow, aniState->rssiThrHigh);
aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel = immunityLevel;
entry_ofdm = &ofdm_level_table[aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel];
entry_cck = &cck_level_table[aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel];
if (aniState->spurImmunityLevel != entry_ofdm->spur_immunity_level)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL,
entry_ofdm->spur_immunity_level);
if (aniState->firstepLevel != entry_ofdm->fir_step_level &&
entry_ofdm->fir_step_level >= entry_cck->fir_step_level)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
entry_ofdm->fir_step_level);
if ((ah->opmode != NL80211_IFTYPE_STATION &&
ah->opmode != NL80211_IFTYPE_ADHOC) ||
aniState->noiseFloor <= aniState->rssiThrHigh) {
if (aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff)
/* force on ofdm weak sig detect */
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION,
true);
else if (aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff ==
entry_ofdm->ofdm_weak_signal_on)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION,
entry_ofdm->ofdm_weak_signal_on);
}
}
static void ath9k_hw_ani_ofdm_err_trigger_new(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
aniState = ah->curani;
if (aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel < ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_MAX_LEVEL)
ath9k_hw_set_ofdm_nil(ah, aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel + 1);
}
/*
* Set the ANI settings to match an CCK level.
*/
static void ath9k_hw_set_cck_nil(struct ath_hw *ah, u_int8_t immunityLevel)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState = ah->curani;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
const struct ani_ofdm_level_entry *entry_ofdm;
const struct ani_cck_level_entry *entry_cck;
aniState->noiseFloor = BEACON_RSSI(ah);
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"**** ccklevel %d=>%d, rssi=%d[lo=%d hi=%d]\n",
aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel, immunityLevel,
aniState->noiseFloor, aniState->rssiThrLow,
aniState->rssiThrHigh);
if ((ah->opmode == NL80211_IFTYPE_STATION ||
ah->opmode == NL80211_IFTYPE_ADHOC) &&
aniState->noiseFloor <= aniState->rssiThrLow &&
immunityLevel > ATH9K_ANI_CCK_MAX_LEVEL_LOW_RSSI)
immunityLevel = ATH9K_ANI_CCK_MAX_LEVEL_LOW_RSSI;
aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel = immunityLevel;
entry_ofdm = &ofdm_level_table[aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel];
entry_cck = &cck_level_table[aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel];
if (aniState->firstepLevel != entry_cck->fir_step_level &&
entry_cck->fir_step_level >= entry_ofdm->fir_step_level)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
entry_cck->fir_step_level);
/* Skip MRC CCK for pre AR9003 families */
if (!AR_SREV_9300_20_OR_LATER(ah))
return;
if (aniState->mrcCCKOff == entry_cck->mrc_cck_on)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_MRC_CCK,
entry_cck->mrc_cck_on);
}
static void ath9k_hw_ani_cck_err_trigger_new(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
aniState = ah->curani;
if (aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel < ATH9K_ANI_CCK_MAX_LEVEL)
ath9k_hw_set_cck_nil(ah, aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel + 1);
}
static void ath9k_hw_ani_lower_immunity_old(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
int32_t rssi;
aniState = ah->curani;
if (ah->opmode == NL80211_IFTYPE_AP) {
if (aniState->firstepLevel > 0) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel - 1))
return;
}
} else {
rssi = BEACON_RSSI(ah);
if (rssi > aniState->rssiThrHigh) {
/* XXX: Handle me */
} else if (rssi > aniState->rssiThrLow) {
if (aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION,
true) == true)
return;
}
if (aniState->firstepLevel > 0) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel - 1) == true)
return;
}
} else {
if (aniState->firstepLevel > 0) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah,
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel - 1) == true)
return;
}
}
}
if (aniState->spurImmunityLevel > 0) {
if (ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL,
aniState->spurImmunityLevel - 1))
return;
}
if (aniState->noiseImmunityLevel > 0) {
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_NOISE_IMMUNITY_LEVEL,
aniState->noiseImmunityLevel - 1);
return;
}
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
/*
* only lower either OFDM or CCK errors per turn
* we lower the other one next time
*/
static void ath9k_hw_ani_lower_immunity_new(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
aniState = ah->curani;
/* lower OFDM noise immunity */
if (aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel > 0 &&
(aniState->ofdmsTurn || aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel == 0)) {
ath9k_hw_set_ofdm_nil(ah, aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel - 1);
return;
}
/* lower CCK noise immunity */
if (aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel > 0)
ath9k_hw_set_cck_nil(ah, aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel - 1);
}
static u8 ath9k_hw_chan_2_clockrate_mhz(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath9k_channel *chan = ah->curchan;
struct ieee80211_conf *conf = &ath9k_hw_common(ah)->hw->conf;
u8 clockrate; /* in MHz */
if (!ah->curchan) /* should really check for CCK instead */
clockrate = ATH9K_CLOCK_RATE_CCK;
else if (conf->channel->band == IEEE80211_BAND_2GHZ)
clockrate = ATH9K_CLOCK_RATE_2GHZ_OFDM;
else if (IS_CHAN_A_FAST_CLOCK(ah, chan))
clockrate = ATH9K_CLOCK_FAST_RATE_5GHZ_OFDM;
else
clockrate = ATH9K_CLOCK_RATE_5GHZ_OFDM;
if (conf_is_ht40(conf))
return clockrate * 2;
return clockrate * 2;
}
static int32_t ath9k_hw_ani_get_listen_time(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
u32 txFrameCount, rxFrameCount, cycleCount;
int32_t listenTime;
txFrameCount = REG_READ(ah, AR_TFCNT);
rxFrameCount = REG_READ(ah, AR_RFCNT);
cycleCount = REG_READ(ah, AR_CCCNT);
aniState = ah->curani;
if (aniState->cycleCount == 0 || aniState->cycleCount > cycleCount) {
listenTime = 0;
ah->stats.ast_ani_lzero++;
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"1st call: aniState->cycleCount=%d\n",
aniState->cycleCount);
} else {
int32_t ccdelta = cycleCount - aniState->cycleCount;
int32_t rfdelta = rxFrameCount - aniState->rxFrameCount;
int32_t tfdelta = txFrameCount - aniState->txFrameCount;
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
int32_t clock_rate;
/*
* convert HW counter values to ms using mode
* specifix clock rate
*/
clock_rate = ath9k_hw_chan_2_clockrate_mhz(ah) * 1000;;
listenTime = (ccdelta - rfdelta - tfdelta) / clock_rate;
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"cyclecount=%d, rfcount=%d, "
"tfcount=%d, listenTime=%d CLOCK_RATE=%d\n",
ccdelta, rfdelta, tfdelta, listenTime, clock_rate);
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
aniState->cycleCount = cycleCount;
aniState->txFrameCount = txFrameCount;
aniState->rxFrameCount = rxFrameCount;
return listenTime;
}
static void ath9k_ani_reset_old(struct ath_hw *ah, bool is_scanning)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
struct ath9k_channel *chan = ah->curchan;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
int index;
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
index = ath9k_hw_get_ani_channel_idx(ah, chan);
aniState = &ah->ani[index];
ah->curani = aniState;
if (DO_ANI(ah) && ah->opmode != NL80211_IFTYPE_STATION
&& ah->opmode != NL80211_IFTYPE_ADHOC) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"Reset ANI state opmode %u\n", ah->opmode);
ah->stats.ast_ani_reset++;
if (ah->opmode == NL80211_IFTYPE_AP) {
/*
* ath9k_hw_ani_control() will only process items set on
* ah->ani_function
*/
if (IS_CHAN_2GHZ(chan))
ah->ani_function = (ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL |
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL);
else
ah->ani_function = 0;
}
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_NOISE_IMMUNITY_LEVEL, 0);
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL, 0);
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL, 0);
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION,
!ATH9K_ANI_USE_OFDM_WEAK_SIG);
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_CCK_WEAK_SIGNAL_THR,
ATH9K_ANI_CCK_WEAK_SIG_THR);
ath9k_hw_setrxfilter(ah, ath9k_hw_getrxfilter(ah) |
ATH9K_RX_FILTER_PHYERR);
if (ah->opmode == NL80211_IFTYPE_AP) {
ah->curani->ofdmTrigHigh =
ah->config.ofdm_trig_high;
ah->curani->ofdmTrigLow =
ah->config.ofdm_trig_low;
ah->curani->cckTrigHigh =
ah->config.cck_trig_high;
ah->curani->cckTrigLow =
ah->config.cck_trig_low;
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_ani_restart_old(ah);
return;
}
if (aniState->noiseImmunityLevel != 0)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_NOISE_IMMUNITY_LEVEL,
aniState->noiseImmunityLevel);
if (aniState->spurImmunityLevel != 0)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL,
aniState->spurImmunityLevel);
if (aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION,
!aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff);
if (aniState->cckWeakSigThreshold)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_CCK_WEAK_SIGNAL_THR,
aniState->cckWeakSigThreshold);
if (aniState->firstepLevel != 0)
ath9k_hw_ani_control(ah, ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL,
aniState->firstepLevel);
ath9k_hw_setrxfilter(ah, ath9k_hw_getrxfilter(ah) &
~ATH9K_RX_FILTER_PHYERR);
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_ani_restart_old(ah);
ENABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_1, AR_PHY_ERR_OFDM_TIMING);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_2, AR_PHY_ERR_CCK_TIMING);
REGWRITE_BUFFER_FLUSH(ah);
DISABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
}
/*
* Restore the ANI parameters in the HAL and reset the statistics.
* This routine should be called for every hardware reset and for
* every channel change.
*/
static void ath9k_ani_reset_new(struct ath_hw *ah, bool is_scanning)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState = ah->curani;
struct ath9k_channel *chan = ah->curchan;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
BUG_ON(aniState == NULL);
ah->stats.ast_ani_reset++;
/* only allow a subset of functions in AP mode */
if (ah->opmode == NL80211_IFTYPE_AP) {
if (IS_CHAN_2GHZ(chan)) {
ah->ani_function = (ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL |
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL);
if (AR_SREV_9300_20_OR_LATER(ah))
ah->ani_function |= ATH9K_ANI_MRC_CCK;
} else
ah->ani_function = 0;
}
/* always allow mode (on/off) to be controlled */
ah->ani_function |= ATH9K_ANI_MODE;
if (is_scanning ||
(ah->opmode != NL80211_IFTYPE_STATION &&
ah->opmode != NL80211_IFTYPE_ADHOC)) {
/*
* If we're scanning or in AP mode, the defaults (ini)
* should be in place. For an AP we assume the historical
* levels for this channel are probably outdated so start
* from defaults instead.
*/
if (aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel !=
ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_DEF_LEVEL ||
aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel !=
ATH9K_ANI_CCK_DEF_LEVEL) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"Restore defaults: opmode %u "
"chan %d Mhz/0x%x is_scanning=%d "
"ofdm:%d cck:%d\n",
ah->opmode,
chan->channel,
chan->channelFlags,
is_scanning,
aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel,
aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel);
ath9k_hw_set_ofdm_nil(ah, ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_DEF_LEVEL);
ath9k_hw_set_cck_nil(ah, ATH9K_ANI_CCK_DEF_LEVEL);
}
} else {
/*
* restore historical levels for this channel
*/
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"Restore history: opmode %u "
"chan %d Mhz/0x%x is_scanning=%d "
"ofdm:%d cck:%d\n",
ah->opmode,
chan->channel,
chan->channelFlags,
is_scanning,
aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel,
aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel);
ath9k_hw_set_ofdm_nil(ah,
aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel);
ath9k_hw_set_cck_nil(ah,
aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel);
}
/*
* enable phy counters if hw supports or if not, enable phy
* interrupts (so we can count each one)
*/
ath9k_ani_restart_new(ah);
ENABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_1, AR_PHY_ERR_OFDM_TIMING);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_2, AR_PHY_ERR_CCK_TIMING);
REGWRITE_BUFFER_FLUSH(ah);
DISABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
}
static void ath9k_hw_ani_monitor_old(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
int32_t listenTime;
u32 phyCnt1, phyCnt2;
u32 ofdmPhyErrCnt, cckPhyErrCnt;
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
aniState = ah->curani;
listenTime = ath9k_hw_ani_get_listen_time(ah);
if (listenTime < 0) {
ah->stats.ast_ani_lneg++;
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_ani_restart_old(ah);
return;
}
aniState->listenTime += listenTime;
ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(ah, &ah->ah_mibStats);
phyCnt1 = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1);
phyCnt2 = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2);
if (phyCnt1 < aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase ||
phyCnt2 < aniState->cckPhyErrBase) {
if (phyCnt1 < aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"phyCnt1 0x%x, resetting "
"counter value to 0x%x\n",
phyCnt1,
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1,
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_1,
AR_PHY_ERR_OFDM_TIMING);
}
if (phyCnt2 < aniState->cckPhyErrBase) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"phyCnt2 0x%x, resetting "
"counter value to 0x%x\n",
phyCnt2,
aniState->cckPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2,
aniState->cckPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_2,
AR_PHY_ERR_CCK_TIMING);
}
return;
}
ofdmPhyErrCnt = phyCnt1 - aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase;
ah->stats.ast_ani_ofdmerrs +=
ofdmPhyErrCnt - aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount;
aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount = ofdmPhyErrCnt;
cckPhyErrCnt = phyCnt2 - aniState->cckPhyErrBase;
ah->stats.ast_ani_cckerrs +=
cckPhyErrCnt - aniState->cckPhyErrCount;
aniState->cckPhyErrCount = cckPhyErrCnt;
if (aniState->listenTime > 5 * ah->aniperiod) {
if (aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount <= aniState->listenTime *
aniState->ofdmTrigLow / 1000 &&
aniState->cckPhyErrCount <= aniState->listenTime *
aniState->cckTrigLow / 1000)
ath9k_hw_ani_lower_immunity(ah);
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_ani_restart_old(ah);
} else if (aniState->listenTime > ah->aniperiod) {
if (aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount > aniState->listenTime *
aniState->ofdmTrigHigh / 1000) {
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_hw_ani_ofdm_err_trigger_old(ah);
ath9k_ani_restart_old(ah);
} else if (aniState->cckPhyErrCount >
aniState->listenTime * aniState->cckTrigHigh /
1000) {
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_hw_ani_cck_err_trigger_old(ah);
ath9k_ani_restart_old(ah);
}
}
}
static void ath9k_hw_ani_monitor_new(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
int32_t listenTime;
u32 phyCnt1, phyCnt2;
u32 ofdmPhyErrCnt, cckPhyErrCnt;
u32 ofdmPhyErrRate, cckPhyErrRate;
if (!DO_ANI(ah))
return;
aniState = ah->curani;
if (WARN_ON(!aniState))
return;
listenTime = ath9k_hw_ani_get_listen_time(ah);
if (listenTime <= 0) {
ah->stats.ast_ani_lneg++;
/* restart ANI period if listenTime is invalid */
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"listenTime=%d - on new ani monitor\n",
listenTime);
ath9k_ani_restart_new(ah);
return;
}
aniState->listenTime += listenTime;
ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(ah, &ah->ah_mibStats);
phyCnt1 = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1);
phyCnt2 = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2);
if (phyCnt1 < aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase ||
phyCnt2 < aniState->cckPhyErrBase) {
if (phyCnt1 < aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"phyCnt1 0x%x, resetting "
"counter value to 0x%x\n",
phyCnt1,
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1,
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_1,
AR_PHY_ERR_OFDM_TIMING);
}
if (phyCnt2 < aniState->cckPhyErrBase) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"phyCnt2 0x%x, resetting "
"counter value to 0x%x\n",
phyCnt2,
aniState->cckPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2,
aniState->cckPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_2,
AR_PHY_ERR_CCK_TIMING);
}
return;
}
ofdmPhyErrCnt = phyCnt1 - aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase;
ah->stats.ast_ani_ofdmerrs +=
ofdmPhyErrCnt - aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount;
aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount = ofdmPhyErrCnt;
cckPhyErrCnt = phyCnt2 - aniState->cckPhyErrBase;
ah->stats.ast_ani_cckerrs +=
cckPhyErrCnt - aniState->cckPhyErrCount;
aniState->cckPhyErrCount = cckPhyErrCnt;
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"Errors: OFDM=0x%08x-0x%08x=%d "
"CCK=0x%08x-0x%08x=%d\n",
phyCnt1,
aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase,
ofdmPhyErrCnt,
phyCnt2,
aniState->cckPhyErrBase,
cckPhyErrCnt);
ofdmPhyErrRate = aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount * 1000 /
aniState->listenTime;
cckPhyErrRate = aniState->cckPhyErrCount * 1000 /
aniState->listenTime;
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"listenTime=%d OFDM:%d errs=%d/s CCK:%d "
"errs=%d/s ofdm_turn=%d\n",
listenTime, aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel,
ofdmPhyErrRate, aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel,
cckPhyErrRate, aniState->ofdmsTurn);
if (aniState->listenTime > 5 * ah->aniperiod) {
if (ofdmPhyErrRate <= aniState->ofdmTrigLow &&
cckPhyErrRate <= aniState->cckTrigLow) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"1. listenTime=%d OFDM:%d errs=%d/s(<%d) "
"CCK:%d errs=%d/s(<%d) -> "
"ath9k_hw_ani_lower_immunity()\n",
aniState->listenTime,
aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel,
ofdmPhyErrRate,
aniState->ofdmTrigLow,
aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel,
cckPhyErrRate,
aniState->cckTrigLow);
ath9k_hw_ani_lower_immunity(ah);
aniState->ofdmsTurn = !aniState->ofdmsTurn;
}
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"1 listenTime=%d ofdm=%d/s cck=%d/s - "
"calling ath9k_ani_restart_new()\n",
aniState->listenTime, ofdmPhyErrRate, cckPhyErrRate);
ath9k_ani_restart_new(ah);
} else if (aniState->listenTime > ah->aniperiod) {
/* check to see if need to raise immunity */
if (ofdmPhyErrRate > aniState->ofdmTrigHigh &&
(cckPhyErrRate <= aniState->cckTrigHigh ||
aniState->ofdmsTurn)) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"2 listenTime=%d OFDM:%d errs=%d/s(>%d) -> "
"ath9k_hw_ani_ofdm_err_trigger_new()\n",
aniState->listenTime,
aniState->ofdmNoiseImmunityLevel,
ofdmPhyErrRate,
aniState->ofdmTrigHigh);
ath9k_hw_ani_ofdm_err_trigger_new(ah);
ath9k_ani_restart_new(ah);
aniState->ofdmsTurn = false;
} else if (cckPhyErrRate > aniState->cckTrigHigh) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"3 listenTime=%d CCK:%d errs=%d/s(>%d) -> "
"ath9k_hw_ani_cck_err_trigger_new()\n",
aniState->listenTime,
aniState->cckNoiseImmunityLevel,
cckPhyErrRate,
aniState->cckTrigHigh);
ath9k_hw_ani_cck_err_trigger_new(ah);
ath9k_ani_restart_new(ah);
aniState->ofdmsTurn = true;
}
}
}
void ath9k_enable_mib_counters(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI, "Enable MIB counters\n");
ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(ah, &ah->ah_mibStats);
ENABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_FILT_OFDM, 0);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_FILT_CCK, 0);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_MIBC,
~(AR_MIBC_COW | AR_MIBC_FMC | AR_MIBC_CMC | AR_MIBC_MCS)
& 0x0f);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_1, AR_PHY_ERR_OFDM_TIMING);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_MASK_2, AR_PHY_ERR_CCK_TIMING);
REGWRITE_BUFFER_FLUSH(ah);
DISABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
}
/* Freeze the MIB counters, get the stats and then clear them */
void ath9k_hw_disable_mib_counters(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI, "Disable MIB counters\n");
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_MIBC, AR_MIBC_FMC);
ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(ah, &ah->ah_mibStats);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_MIBC, AR_MIBC_CMC);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_FILT_OFDM, 0);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_FILT_CCK, 0);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(ath9k_hw_disable_mib_counters);
u32 ath9k_hw_GetMibCycleCountsPct(struct ath_hw *ah,
u32 *rxc_pcnt,
u32 *rxf_pcnt,
u32 *txf_pcnt)
{
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
static u32 cycles, rx_clear, rx_frame, tx_frame;
u32 good = 1;
u32 rc = REG_READ(ah, AR_RCCNT);
u32 rf = REG_READ(ah, AR_RFCNT);
u32 tf = REG_READ(ah, AR_TFCNT);
u32 cc = REG_READ(ah, AR_CCCNT);
if (cycles == 0 || cycles > cc) {
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"cycle counter wrap. ExtBusy = 0\n");
good = 0;
} else {
u32 cc_d = cc - cycles;
u32 rc_d = rc - rx_clear;
u32 rf_d = rf - rx_frame;
u32 tf_d = tf - tx_frame;
if (cc_d != 0) {
*rxc_pcnt = rc_d * 100 / cc_d;
*rxf_pcnt = rf_d * 100 / cc_d;
*txf_pcnt = tf_d * 100 / cc_d;
} else {
good = 0;
}
}
cycles = cc;
rx_frame = rf;
rx_clear = rc;
tx_frame = tf;
return good;
}
/*
* Process a MIB interrupt. We may potentially be invoked because
* any of the MIB counters overflow/trigger so don't assume we're
* here because a PHY error counter triggered.
*/
static void ath9k_hw_proc_mib_event_old(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
u32 phyCnt1, phyCnt2;
/* Reset these counters regardless */
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_FILT_OFDM, 0);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_FILT_CCK, 0);
if (!(REG_READ(ah, AR_SLP_MIB_CTRL) & AR_SLP_MIB_PENDING))
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_SLP_MIB_CTRL, AR_SLP_MIB_CLEAR);
/* Clear the mib counters and save them in the stats */
ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(ah, &ah->ah_mibStats);
if (!DO_ANI(ah)) {
/*
* We must always clear the interrupt cause by
* resetting the phy error regs.
*/
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1, 0);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2, 0);
return;
}
/* NB: these are not reset-on-read */
phyCnt1 = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1);
phyCnt2 = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2);
if (((phyCnt1 & AR_MIBCNT_INTRMASK) == AR_MIBCNT_INTRMASK) ||
((phyCnt2 & AR_MIBCNT_INTRMASK) == AR_MIBCNT_INTRMASK)) {
struct ar5416AniState *aniState = ah->curani;
u32 ofdmPhyErrCnt, cckPhyErrCnt;
/* NB: only use ast_ani_*errs with AH_PRIVATE_DIAG */
ofdmPhyErrCnt = phyCnt1 - aniState->ofdmPhyErrBase;
ah->stats.ast_ani_ofdmerrs +=
ofdmPhyErrCnt - aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount;
aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount = ofdmPhyErrCnt;
cckPhyErrCnt = phyCnt2 - aniState->cckPhyErrBase;
ah->stats.ast_ani_cckerrs +=
cckPhyErrCnt - aniState->cckPhyErrCount;
aniState->cckPhyErrCount = cckPhyErrCnt;
/*
* NB: figure out which counter triggered. If both
* trigger we'll only deal with one as the processing
* clobbers the error counter so the trigger threshold
* check will never be true.
*/
if (aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount > aniState->ofdmTrigHigh)
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_hw_ani_ofdm_err_trigger_new(ah);
if (aniState->cckPhyErrCount > aniState->cckTrigHigh)
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_hw_ani_cck_err_trigger_old(ah);
/* NB: always restart to insure the h/w counters are reset */
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath9k_ani_restart_old(ah);
}
}
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
/*
* Process a MIB interrupt. We may potentially be invoked because
* any of the MIB counters overflow/trigger so don't assume we're
* here because a PHY error counter triggered.
*/
static void ath9k_hw_proc_mib_event_new(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
u32 phyCnt1, phyCnt2;
/* Reset these counters regardless */
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_FILT_OFDM, 0);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_FILT_CCK, 0);
if (!(REG_READ(ah, AR_SLP_MIB_CTRL) & AR_SLP_MIB_PENDING))
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_SLP_MIB_CTRL, AR_SLP_MIB_CLEAR);
/* Clear the mib counters and save them in the stats */
ath9k_hw_update_mibstats(ah, &ah->ah_mibStats);
if (!DO_ANI(ah)) {
/*
* We must always clear the interrupt cause by
* resetting the phy error regs.
*/
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1, 0);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2, 0);
return;
}
/* NB: these are not reset-on-read */
phyCnt1 = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1);
phyCnt2 = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2);
/* NB: always restart to insure the h/w counters are reset */
if (((phyCnt1 & AR_MIBCNT_INTRMASK) == AR_MIBCNT_INTRMASK) ||
((phyCnt2 & AR_MIBCNT_INTRMASK) == AR_MIBCNT_INTRMASK))
ath9k_ani_restart_new(ah);
}
void ath9k_hw_ani_setup(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
int i;
const int totalSizeDesired[] = { -55, -55, -55, -55, -62 };
const int coarseHigh[] = { -14, -14, -14, -14, -12 };
const int coarseLow[] = { -64, -64, -64, -64, -70 };
const int firpwr[] = { -78, -78, -78, -78, -80 };
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
ah->totalSizeDesired[i] = totalSizeDesired[i];
ah->coarse_high[i] = coarseHigh[i];
ah->coarse_low[i] = coarseLow[i];
ah->firpwr[i] = firpwr[i];
}
}
void ath9k_hw_ani_init(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
int i;
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI, "Initialize ANI\n");
memset(ah->ani, 0, sizeof(ah->ani));
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(ah->ani); i++) {
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
if (AR_SREV_9300_20_OR_LATER(ah) || modparam_force_new_ani) {
ah->ani[i].ofdmTrigHigh = ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_TRIG_HIGH_NEW;
ah->ani[i].ofdmTrigLow = ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_TRIG_LOW_NEW;
ah->ani[i].cckTrigHigh = ATH9K_ANI_CCK_TRIG_HIGH_NEW;
ah->ani[i].cckTrigLow = ATH9K_ANI_CCK_TRIG_LOW_NEW;
ah->ani[i].spurImmunityLevel =
ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNE_LVL_NEW;
ah->ani[i].firstepLevel = ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LVL_NEW;
ah->ani[i].ofdmPhyErrBase = 0;
ah->ani[i].cckPhyErrBase = 0;
if (AR_SREV_9300_20_OR_LATER(ah))
ah->ani[i].mrcCCKOff =
!ATH9K_ANI_ENABLE_MRC_CCK;
else
ah->ani[i].mrcCCKOff = true;
ah->ani[i].ofdmsTurn = true;
} else {
ah->ani[i].ofdmTrigHigh = ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_TRIG_HIGH_OLD;
ah->ani[i].ofdmTrigLow = ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_TRIG_LOW_OLD;
ah->ani[i].cckTrigHigh = ATH9K_ANI_CCK_TRIG_HIGH_OLD;
ah->ani[i].cckTrigLow = ATH9K_ANI_CCK_TRIG_LOW_OLD;
ah->ani[i].spurImmunityLevel =
ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNE_LVL_OLD;
ah->ani[i].firstepLevel = ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LVL_OLD;
ah->ani[i].ofdmPhyErrBase =
AR_PHY_COUNTMAX - ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_TRIG_HIGH_OLD;
ah->ani[i].cckPhyErrBase =
AR_PHY_COUNTMAX - ATH9K_ANI_CCK_TRIG_HIGH_OLD;
ah->ani[i].cckWeakSigThreshold =
ATH9K_ANI_CCK_WEAK_SIG_THR;
}
ah->ani[i].rssiThrHigh = ATH9K_ANI_RSSI_THR_HIGH;
ah->ani[i].rssiThrLow = ATH9K_ANI_RSSI_THR_LOW;
ah->ani[i].ofdmWeakSigDetectOff =
!ATH9K_ANI_USE_OFDM_WEAK_SIG;
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ah->ani[i].cckNoiseImmunityLevel = ATH9K_ANI_CCK_DEF_LEVEL;
}
/*
* since we expect some ongoing maintenance on the tables, let's sanity
* check here default level should not modify INI setting.
*/
if (AR_SREV_9300_20_OR_LATER(ah) || modparam_force_new_ani) {
const struct ani_ofdm_level_entry *entry_ofdm;
const struct ani_cck_level_entry *entry_cck;
entry_ofdm = &ofdm_level_table[ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_DEF_LEVEL];
entry_cck = &cck_level_table[ATH9K_ANI_CCK_DEF_LEVEL];
ah->aniperiod = ATH9K_ANI_PERIOD_NEW;
ah->config.ani_poll_interval = ATH9K_ANI_POLLINTERVAL_NEW;
} else {
ah->aniperiod = ATH9K_ANI_PERIOD_OLD;
ah->config.ani_poll_interval = ATH9K_ANI_POLLINTERVAL_OLD;
}
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"Setting OfdmErrBase = 0x%08x\n",
ah->ani[0].ofdmPhyErrBase);
ath_print(common, ATH_DBG_ANI, "Setting cckErrBase = 0x%08x\n",
ah->ani[0].cckPhyErrBase);
ENABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_1, ah->ani[0].ofdmPhyErrBase);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ERR_2, ah->ani[0].cckPhyErrBase);
REGWRITE_BUFFER_FLUSH(ah);
DISABLE_REGWRITE_BUFFER(ah);
ath9k_enable_mib_counters(ah);
if (ah->config.enable_ani)
ah->proc_phyerr |= HAL_PROCESS_ANI;
}
void ath9k_hw_attach_ani_ops_old(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath_hw_private_ops *priv_ops = ath9k_hw_private_ops(ah);
struct ath_hw_ops *ops = ath9k_hw_ops(ah);
priv_ops->ani_reset = ath9k_ani_reset_old;
priv_ops->ani_lower_immunity = ath9k_hw_ani_lower_immunity_old;
ops->ani_proc_mib_event = ath9k_hw_proc_mib_event_old;
ops->ani_monitor = ath9k_hw_ani_monitor_old;
ath9k: add new ANI implementation for AR9003 This adds support for ANI for AR9003. The implementation for ANI for AR9003 is slightly different than the one used for the older chipset families. It can technically be used for the older families as well but this is not yet fully tested so we only enable the new ANI for the AR5008, AR9001 and AR9002 families with a module parameter, force_new_ani. The old ANI implementation is left intact. Details of the new ANI implemention: * ANI adjustment logic is now table driven so that each ANI level setting is parameterized. This makes adjustments much more deterministic than the old procedure based logic and allows adjustments to be made incrementally to several parameters per level. * ANI register settings are now relative to INI values; so ANI param zero level == INI value. Appropriate floor and ceiling values are obeyed when adjustments are combined with INI values. * ANI processing is done once per second rather that every 100ms. The poll interval is now a set upon hardware initialization and can be picked up by the core driver. * OFDM error and CCK error processing are made in a round robin fashion rather than allowing all OFDM adjustments to be made before CCK adjustments. * ANI adjusts MRC CCK off in the presence of high CCK errors * When adjusting spur immunity (SI) and OFDM weak signal detection, ANI now sets register values for the extension channel too * When adjusting FIR step (ST), ANI now sets register for FIR step low too * FIR step adjustments now allow for an extra level of immunity for extremely noisy environments * The old Noise immunity setting (NI), which changes coarse low, size desired, etc have been removed. Changing these settings could affect up RIFS RX as well. * CCK weak signal adjustment is no longer used * ANI no longer enables phy error interrupts; in all cases phy hw counting registers are used instead * The phy error count (overflow) interrupts are also no longer used for ANI adjustments. All ANI adjustments are made via the polling routine and no adjustments are possible in the ISR context anymore * A history settings buffer is now correctly used for each channel; channel settings are initialized with the defaults but later changes are restored when returning back to that channel * When scanning, ANI is disabled settings are returned to (INI) defaults. * OFDM phy error thresholds are now 400 & 1000 (errors/second units) for low/high water marks, providing increased stability/hysteresis when changing levels. * Similarly CCK phy error thresholds are now 300 & 600 (errors/second) Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-06-12 00:33:45 -04:00
ath_print(ath9k_hw_common(ah), ATH_DBG_ANY, "Using ANI v1\n");
}
void ath9k_hw_attach_ani_ops_new(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath_hw_private_ops *priv_ops = ath9k_hw_private_ops(ah);
struct ath_hw_ops *ops = ath9k_hw_ops(ah);
priv_ops->ani_reset = ath9k_ani_reset_new;
priv_ops->ani_lower_immunity = ath9k_hw_ani_lower_immunity_new;
ops->ani_proc_mib_event = ath9k_hw_proc_mib_event_new;
ops->ani_monitor = ath9k_hw_ani_monitor_new;
ath_print(ath9k_hw_common(ah), ATH_DBG_ANY, "Using ANI v2\n");
}