OpenCloudOS-Kernel/drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_phy.c

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/*
* Copyright (c) 2010-2011 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 "ar9003_phy.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 12:33:45 +08:00
static const int firstep_table[] =
/* level: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 */
{ -4, -2, 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 }; /* lvl 0-8, default 2 */
static const int cycpwrThr1_table[] =
/* level: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 */
{ -6, -4, -2, 0, 2, 4, 6, 8 }; /* lvl 0-7, default 3 */
/*
* register values to turn OFDM weak signal detection OFF
*/
static const int m1ThreshLow_off = 127;
static const int m2ThreshLow_off = 127;
static const int m1Thresh_off = 127;
static const int m2Thresh_off = 127;
static const int m2CountThr_off = 31;
static const int m2CountThrLow_off = 63;
static const int m1ThreshLowExt_off = 127;
static const int m2ThreshLowExt_off = 127;
static const int m1ThreshExt_off = 127;
static const int m2ThreshExt_off = 127;
/**
* ar9003_hw_set_channel - set channel on single-chip device
* @ah: atheros hardware structure
* @chan:
*
* This is the function to change channel on single-chip devices, that is
* all devices after ar9280.
*
* This function takes the channel value in MHz and sets
* hardware channel value. Assumes writes have been enabled to analog bus.
*
* Actual Expression,
*
* For 2GHz channel,
* Channel Frequency = (3/4) * freq_ref * (chansel[8:0] + chanfrac[16:0]/2^17)
* (freq_ref = 40MHz)
*
* For 5GHz channel,
* Channel Frequency = (3/2) * freq_ref * (chansel[8:0] + chanfrac[16:0]/2^10)
* (freq_ref = 40MHz/(24>>amodeRefSel))
*
* For 5GHz channels which are 5MHz spaced,
* Channel Frequency = (3/2) * freq_ref * (chansel[8:0] + chanfrac[16:0]/2^17)
* (freq_ref = 40MHz)
*/
static int ar9003_hw_set_channel(struct ath_hw *ah, struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
u16 bMode, fracMode = 0, aModeRefSel = 0;
u32 freq, channelSel = 0, reg32 = 0;
struct chan_centers centers;
int loadSynthChannel;
ath9k_hw_get_channel_centers(ah, chan, &centers);
freq = centers.synth_center;
if (freq < 4800) { /* 2 GHz, fractional mode */
if (AR_SREV_9330(ah)) {
u32 chan_frac;
u32 div;
if (ah->is_clk_25mhz)
div = 75;
else
div = 120;
channelSel = (freq * 4) / div;
chan_frac = (((freq * 4) % div) * 0x20000) / div;
channelSel = (channelSel << 17) | chan_frac;
} else if (AR_SREV_9485(ah)) {
u32 chan_frac;
/*
* freq_ref = 40 / (refdiva >> amoderefsel); where refdiva=1 and amoderefsel=0
* ndiv = ((chan_mhz * 4) / 3) / freq_ref;
* chansel = int(ndiv), chanfrac = (ndiv - chansel) * 0x20000
*/
channelSel = (freq * 4) / 120;
chan_frac = (((freq * 4) % 120) * 0x20000) / 120;
channelSel = (channelSel << 17) | chan_frac;
} else if (AR_SREV_9340(ah)) {
if (ah->is_clk_25mhz) {
u32 chan_frac;
channelSel = (freq * 2) / 75;
chan_frac = (((freq * 2) % 75) * 0x20000) / 75;
channelSel = (channelSel << 17) | chan_frac;
} else
channelSel = CHANSEL_2G(freq) >> 1;
} else
channelSel = CHANSEL_2G(freq);
/* Set to 2G mode */
bMode = 1;
} else {
if (AR_SREV_9340(ah) && ah->is_clk_25mhz) {
u32 chan_frac;
channelSel = (freq * 2) / 75;
chan_frac = (((freq * 2) % 75) * 0x20000) / 75;
channelSel = (channelSel << 17) | chan_frac;
} else {
channelSel = CHANSEL_5G(freq);
/* Doubler is ON, so, divide channelSel by 2. */
channelSel >>= 1;
}
/* Set to 5G mode */
bMode = 0;
}
/* Enable fractional mode for all channels */
fracMode = 1;
aModeRefSel = 0;
loadSynthChannel = 0;
reg32 = (bMode << 29);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_SYNTH_CONTROL, reg32);
/* Enable Long shift Select for Synthesizer */
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_65NM_CH0_SYNTH4,
AR_PHY_SYNTH4_LONG_SHIFT_SELECT, 1);
/* Program Synth. setting */
reg32 = (channelSel << 2) | (fracMode << 30) |
(aModeRefSel << 28) | (loadSynthChannel << 31);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_65NM_CH0_SYNTH7, reg32);
/* Toggle Load Synth channel bit */
loadSynthChannel = 1;
reg32 = (channelSel << 2) | (fracMode << 30) |
(aModeRefSel << 28) | (loadSynthChannel << 31);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_65NM_CH0_SYNTH7, reg32);
ah->curchan = chan;
ah->curchan_rad_index = -1;
return 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 12:33:45 +08:00
* ar9003_hw_spur_mitigate_mrc_cck - convert baseband spur frequency
* @ah: atheros hardware structure
* @chan:
*
* For single-chip solutions. Converts to baseband spur frequency given the
* input channel frequency and compute register settings below.
*
* Spur mitigation for MRC CCK
*/
static void ar9003_hw_spur_mitigate_mrc_cck(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
ath9k: Use static const Using static const generally increases object text and decreases data size. It also generally decreases overall object size. text data bss dec hex filename 11161 56 2136 13353 3429 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_paprd.o.new 11167 56 2136 13359 342f drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_paprd.o.old 15428 56 3056 18540 486c drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_4k.o.old 15451 56 3056 18563 4883 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_4k.o.new 14087 56 2560 16703 413f drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_9287.o.old 14036 56 2560 16652 410c drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_9287.o.new 10041 56 2384 12481 30c1 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ani.o.new 10088 56 2384 12528 30f0 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ani.o.old 9316 1580 2304 13200 3390 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/htc_drv_init.o.new 9316 1580 2304 13200 3390 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/htc_drv_init.o.old 16483 56 3432 19971 4e03 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_phy.o.new 16517 56 3432 20005 4e25 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_phy.o.old 18221 104 2960 21285 5325 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/rc.o.old 18203 104 2960 21267 5313 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/rc.o.new 19985 56 4288 24329 5f09 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_def.o.new 20040 56 4288 24384 5f40 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_def.o.old 23997 56 4984 29037 716d drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar5008_phy.o.old 23846 56 4984 28886 70d6 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar5008_phy.o.new 24285 56 3184 27525 6b85 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_eeprom.o.old 24101 56 3184 27341 6acd drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_eeprom.o.new 6834 56 1032 7922 1ef2 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9002_phy.o.old 6780 56 1032 7868 1ebc drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9002_phy.o.new 36211 64 8624 44899 af63 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/hw.o.new 36401 64 8624 45089 b021 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/hw.o.old 9281 56 1496 10833 2a51 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_calib.o.old 9150 56 1496 10702 29ce drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_calib.o.new Use ARRAY_SIZE instead of a magic number. Signed-off-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-11-21 10:38:53 +08:00
static const u32 spur_freq[4] = { 2420, 2440, 2464, 2480 };
int cur_bb_spur, negative = 0, cck_spur_freq;
int i;
int range, max_spur_cnts, synth_freq;
u8 *spur_fbin_ptr = NULL;
/*
* Need to verify range +/- 10 MHz in control channel, otherwise spur
* is out-of-band and can be ignored.
*/
if (AR_SREV_9485(ah) || AR_SREV_9340(ah) || AR_SREV_9330(ah)) {
spur_fbin_ptr = ar9003_get_spur_chan_ptr(ah,
IS_CHAN_2GHZ(chan));
if (spur_fbin_ptr[0] == 0) /* No spur */
return;
max_spur_cnts = 5;
if (IS_CHAN_HT40(chan)) {
range = 19;
if (REG_READ_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_GEN_CTRL,
AR_PHY_GC_DYN2040_PRI_CH) == 0)
synth_freq = chan->channel + 10;
else
synth_freq = chan->channel - 10;
} else {
range = 10;
synth_freq = chan->channel;
}
} else {
range = 10;
max_spur_cnts = 4;
synth_freq = chan->channel;
}
for (i = 0; i < max_spur_cnts; i++) {
negative = 0;
if (AR_SREV_9485(ah) || AR_SREV_9340(ah) || AR_SREV_9330(ah))
cur_bb_spur = FBIN2FREQ(spur_fbin_ptr[i],
IS_CHAN_2GHZ(chan)) - synth_freq;
else
cur_bb_spur = spur_freq[i] - synth_freq;
if (cur_bb_spur < 0) {
negative = 1;
cur_bb_spur = -cur_bb_spur;
}
if (cur_bb_spur < range) {
cck_spur_freq = (int)((cur_bb_spur << 19) / 11);
if (negative == 1)
cck_spur_freq = -cck_spur_freq;
cck_spur_freq = cck_spur_freq & 0xfffff;
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_AGC_CONTROL,
AR_PHY_AGC_CONTROL_YCOK_MAX, 0x7);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT,
AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT_SPUR_RSSI_THR, 0x7f);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT,
AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT_SPUR_FILTER_TYPE,
0x2);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT,
AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT_USE_CCK_SPUR_MIT,
0x1);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT,
AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT_CCK_SPUR_FREQ,
cck_spur_freq);
return;
}
}
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_AGC_CONTROL,
AR_PHY_AGC_CONTROL_YCOK_MAX, 0x5);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT,
AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT_USE_CCK_SPUR_MIT, 0x0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT,
AR_PHY_CCK_SPUR_MIT_CCK_SPUR_FREQ, 0x0);
}
/* Clean all spur register fields */
static void ar9003_hw_spur_ofdm_clear(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING4,
AR_PHY_TIMING4_ENABLE_SPUR_FILTER, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING11,
AR_PHY_TIMING11_SPUR_FREQ_SD, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING11,
AR_PHY_TIMING11_SPUR_DELTA_PHASE, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT,
AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_SPUR_SUBCHANNEL_SD, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING11,
AR_PHY_TIMING11_USE_SPUR_FILTER_IN_AGC, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING11,
AR_PHY_TIMING11_USE_SPUR_FILTER_IN_SELFCOR, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING4,
AR_PHY_TIMING4_ENABLE_SPUR_RSSI, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_EN_VIT_SPUR_RSSI, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_ENABLE_NF_RSSI_SPUR_MIT, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_ENABLE_MASK_PPM, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING4,
AR_PHY_TIMING4_ENABLE_PILOT_MASK, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING4,
AR_PHY_TIMING4_ENABLE_CHAN_MASK, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_PILOT_SPUR_MASK,
AR_PHY_PILOT_SPUR_MASK_CF_PILOT_MASK_IDX_A, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_MASK_A,
AR_PHY_SPUR_MASK_A_CF_PUNC_MASK_IDX_A, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CHAN_SPUR_MASK,
AR_PHY_CHAN_SPUR_MASK_CF_CHAN_MASK_IDX_A, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_PILOT_SPUR_MASK,
AR_PHY_PILOT_SPUR_MASK_CF_PILOT_MASK_A, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CHAN_SPUR_MASK,
AR_PHY_CHAN_SPUR_MASK_CF_CHAN_MASK_A, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_MASK_A,
AR_PHY_SPUR_MASK_A_CF_PUNC_MASK_A, 0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_MASK_RATE_CNTL, 0);
}
static void ar9003_hw_spur_ofdm(struct ath_hw *ah,
int freq_offset,
int spur_freq_sd,
int spur_delta_phase,
int spur_subchannel_sd)
{
int mask_index = 0;
/* OFDM Spur mitigation */
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING4,
AR_PHY_TIMING4_ENABLE_SPUR_FILTER, 0x1);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING11,
AR_PHY_TIMING11_SPUR_FREQ_SD, spur_freq_sd);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING11,
AR_PHY_TIMING11_SPUR_DELTA_PHASE, spur_delta_phase);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT,
AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_SPUR_SUBCHANNEL_SD, spur_subchannel_sd);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING11,
AR_PHY_TIMING11_USE_SPUR_FILTER_IN_AGC, 0x1);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING11,
AR_PHY_TIMING11_USE_SPUR_FILTER_IN_SELFCOR, 0x1);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING4,
AR_PHY_TIMING4_ENABLE_SPUR_RSSI, 0x1);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_SPUR_RSSI_THRESH, 34);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_EN_VIT_SPUR_RSSI, 1);
if (REG_READ_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_MODE,
AR_PHY_MODE_DYNAMIC) == 0x1)
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_ENABLE_NF_RSSI_SPUR_MIT, 1);
mask_index = (freq_offset << 4) / 5;
if (mask_index < 0)
mask_index = mask_index - 1;
mask_index = mask_index & 0x7f;
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_ENABLE_MASK_PPM, 0x1);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING4,
AR_PHY_TIMING4_ENABLE_PILOT_MASK, 0x1);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING4,
AR_PHY_TIMING4_ENABLE_CHAN_MASK, 0x1);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_PILOT_SPUR_MASK,
AR_PHY_PILOT_SPUR_MASK_CF_PILOT_MASK_IDX_A, mask_index);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_MASK_A,
AR_PHY_SPUR_MASK_A_CF_PUNC_MASK_IDX_A, mask_index);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CHAN_SPUR_MASK,
AR_PHY_CHAN_SPUR_MASK_CF_CHAN_MASK_IDX_A, mask_index);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_PILOT_SPUR_MASK,
AR_PHY_PILOT_SPUR_MASK_CF_PILOT_MASK_A, 0xc);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_CHAN_SPUR_MASK,
AR_PHY_CHAN_SPUR_MASK_CF_CHAN_MASK_A, 0xc);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_MASK_A,
AR_PHY_SPUR_MASK_A_CF_PUNC_MASK_A, 0xa0);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SPUR_REG,
AR_PHY_SPUR_REG_MASK_RATE_CNTL, 0xff);
}
static void ar9003_hw_spur_ofdm_work(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan,
int freq_offset)
{
int spur_freq_sd = 0;
int spur_subchannel_sd = 0;
int spur_delta_phase = 0;
if (IS_CHAN_HT40(chan)) {
if (freq_offset < 0) {
if (REG_READ_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_GEN_CTRL,
AR_PHY_GC_DYN2040_PRI_CH) == 0x0)
spur_subchannel_sd = 1;
else
spur_subchannel_sd = 0;
spur_freq_sd = (freq_offset << 9) / 11;
} else {
if (REG_READ_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_GEN_CTRL,
AR_PHY_GC_DYN2040_PRI_CH) == 0x0)
spur_subchannel_sd = 0;
else
spur_subchannel_sd = 1;
spur_freq_sd = (freq_offset << 9) / 11;
}
spur_delta_phase = (freq_offset << 17) / 5;
} else {
spur_subchannel_sd = 0;
spur_freq_sd = (freq_offset << 9) /11;
spur_delta_phase = (freq_offset << 18) / 5;
}
spur_freq_sd = spur_freq_sd & 0x3ff;
spur_delta_phase = spur_delta_phase & 0xfffff;
ar9003_hw_spur_ofdm(ah,
freq_offset,
spur_freq_sd,
spur_delta_phase,
spur_subchannel_sd);
}
/* Spur mitigation for OFDM */
static void ar9003_hw_spur_mitigate_ofdm(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
int synth_freq;
int range = 10;
int freq_offset = 0;
int mode;
u8* spurChansPtr;
unsigned int i;
struct ar9300_eeprom *eep = &ah->eeprom.ar9300_eep;
if (IS_CHAN_5GHZ(chan)) {
spurChansPtr = &(eep->modalHeader5G.spurChans[0]);
mode = 0;
}
else {
spurChansPtr = &(eep->modalHeader2G.spurChans[0]);
mode = 1;
}
if (spurChansPtr[0] == 0)
return; /* No spur in the mode */
if (IS_CHAN_HT40(chan)) {
range = 19;
if (REG_READ_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_GEN_CTRL,
AR_PHY_GC_DYN2040_PRI_CH) == 0x0)
synth_freq = chan->channel - 10;
else
synth_freq = chan->channel + 10;
} else {
range = 10;
synth_freq = chan->channel;
}
ar9003_hw_spur_ofdm_clear(ah);
for (i = 0; i < AR_EEPROM_MODAL_SPURS && spurChansPtr[i]; i++) {
freq_offset = FBIN2FREQ(spurChansPtr[i], mode) - synth_freq;
if (abs(freq_offset) < range) {
ar9003_hw_spur_ofdm_work(ah, chan, freq_offset);
break;
}
}
}
static void ar9003_hw_spur_mitigate(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
ar9003_hw_spur_mitigate_mrc_cck(ah, chan);
ar9003_hw_spur_mitigate_ofdm(ah, chan);
}
static u32 ar9003_hw_compute_pll_control(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
u32 pll;
pll = SM(0x5, AR_RTC_9300_PLL_REFDIV);
if (chan && IS_CHAN_HALF_RATE(chan))
pll |= SM(0x1, AR_RTC_9300_PLL_CLKSEL);
else if (chan && IS_CHAN_QUARTER_RATE(chan))
pll |= SM(0x2, AR_RTC_9300_PLL_CLKSEL);
pll |= SM(0x2c, AR_RTC_9300_PLL_DIV);
return pll;
}
static void ar9003_hw_set_channel_regs(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
u32 phymode;
u32 enableDacFifo = 0;
enableDacFifo =
(REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_GEN_CTRL) & AR_PHY_GC_ENABLE_DAC_FIFO);
/* Enable 11n HT, 20 MHz */
phymode = AR_PHY_GC_HT_EN | AR_PHY_GC_SINGLE_HT_LTF1 |
AR_PHY_GC_SHORT_GI_40 | enableDacFifo;
/* Configure baseband for dynamic 20/40 operation */
if (IS_CHAN_HT40(chan)) {
phymode |= AR_PHY_GC_DYN2040_EN;
/* Configure control (primary) channel at +-10MHz */
if ((chan->chanmode == CHANNEL_A_HT40PLUS) ||
(chan->chanmode == CHANNEL_G_HT40PLUS))
phymode |= AR_PHY_GC_DYN2040_PRI_CH;
}
/* make sure we preserve INI settings */
phymode |= REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_GEN_CTRL);
/* turn off Green Field detection for STA for now */
phymode &= ~AR_PHY_GC_GF_DETECT_EN;
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_GEN_CTRL, phymode);
/* Configure MAC for 20/40 operation */
ath9k_hw_set11nmac2040(ah);
/* global transmit timeout (25 TUs default)*/
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_GTXTO, 25 << AR_GTXTO_TIMEOUT_LIMIT_S);
/* carrier sense timeout */
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_CST, 0xF << AR_CST_TIMEOUT_LIMIT_S);
}
static void ar9003_hw_init_bb(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
u32 synthDelay;
/*
* Wait for the frequency synth to settle (synth goes on
* via AR_PHY_ACTIVE_EN). Read the phy active delay register.
* Value is in 100ns increments.
*/
synthDelay = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_RX_DELAY) & AR_PHY_RX_DELAY_DELAY;
if (IS_CHAN_B(chan))
synthDelay = (4 * synthDelay) / 22;
else
synthDelay /= 10;
/* Activate the PHY (includes baseband activate + synthesizer on) */
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ACTIVE, AR_PHY_ACTIVE_EN);
/*
* There is an issue if the AP starts the calibration before
* the base band timeout completes. This could result in the
* rx_clear false triggering. As a workaround we add delay an
* extra BASE_ACTIVATE_DELAY usecs to ensure this condition
* does not happen.
*/
udelay(synthDelay + BASE_ACTIVATE_DELAY);
}
static void ar9003_hw_set_chain_masks(struct ath_hw *ah, u8 rx, u8 tx)
{
switch (rx) {
case 0x5:
REG_SET_BIT(ah, AR_PHY_ANALOG_SWAP,
AR_PHY_SWAP_ALT_CHAIN);
case 0x3:
case 0x1:
case 0x2:
case 0x7:
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_RX_CHAINMASK, rx);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_CAL_CHAINMASK, rx);
break;
default:
break;
}
if ((ah->caps.hw_caps & ATH9K_HW_CAP_APM) && (tx == 0x7))
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_SELFGEN_MASK, 0x3);
else if (AR_SREV_9480(ah))
/* xxx only when MCI support is enabled */
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_SELFGEN_MASK, 0x3);
else
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_SELFGEN_MASK, tx);
if (tx == 0x5) {
REG_SET_BIT(ah, AR_PHY_ANALOG_SWAP,
AR_PHY_SWAP_ALT_CHAIN);
}
}
/*
* Override INI values with chip specific configuration.
*/
static void ar9003_hw_override_ini(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
u32 val;
/*
* Set the RX_ABORT and RX_DIS and clear it only after
* RXE is set for MAC. This prevents frames with
* corrupted descriptor status.
*/
REG_SET_BIT(ah, AR_DIAG_SW, (AR_DIAG_RX_DIS | AR_DIAG_RX_ABORT));
/*
* For AR9280 and above, there is a new feature that allows
* Multicast search based on both MAC Address and Key ID. By default,
* this feature is enabled. But since the driver is not using this
* feature, we switch it off; otherwise multicast search based on
* MAC addr only will fail.
*/
val = REG_READ(ah, AR_PCU_MISC_MODE2) & (~AR_ADHOC_MCAST_KEYID_ENABLE);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PCU_MISC_MODE2,
val | AR_AGG_WEP_ENABLE_FIX | AR_AGG_WEP_ENABLE);
REG_SET_BIT(ah, AR_PHY_CCK_DETECT,
AR_PHY_CCK_DETECT_BB_ENABLE_ANT_FAST_DIV);
}
static void ar9003_hw_prog_ini(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ar5416IniArray *iniArr,
int column)
{
unsigned int i, regWrites = 0;
/* New INI format: Array may be undefined (pre, core, post arrays) */
if (!iniArr->ia_array)
return;
/*
* New INI format: Pre, core, and post arrays for a given subsystem
* may be modal (> 2 columns) or non-modal (2 columns). Determine if
* the array is non-modal and force the column to 1.
*/
if (column >= iniArr->ia_columns)
column = 1;
for (i = 0; i < iniArr->ia_rows; i++) {
u32 reg = INI_RA(iniArr, i, 0);
u32 val = INI_RA(iniArr, i, column);
REG_WRITE(ah, reg, val);
DO_DELAY(regWrites);
}
}
static int ar9003_hw_process_ini(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
unsigned int regWrites = 0, i;
u32 modesIndex;
switch (chan->chanmode) {
case CHANNEL_A:
case CHANNEL_A_HT20:
modesIndex = 1;
break;
case CHANNEL_A_HT40PLUS:
case CHANNEL_A_HT40MINUS:
modesIndex = 2;
break;
case CHANNEL_G:
case CHANNEL_G_HT20:
case CHANNEL_B:
modesIndex = 4;
break;
case CHANNEL_G_HT40PLUS:
case CHANNEL_G_HT40MINUS:
modesIndex = 3;
break;
default:
return -EINVAL;
}
for (i = 0; i < ATH_INI_NUM_SPLIT; i++) {
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->iniSOC[i], modesIndex);
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->iniMac[i], modesIndex);
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->iniBB[i], modesIndex);
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->iniRadio[i], modesIndex);
if (i == ATH_INI_POST && AR_SREV_9480_20(ah))
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah,
&ah->ini_radio_post_sys2ant,
modesIndex);
}
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesRxGain, 1, regWrites);
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesTxGain, modesIndex, regWrites);
/*
* For 5GHz channels requiring Fast Clock, apply
* different modal values.
*/
if (IS_CHAN_A_FAST_CLOCK(ah, chan))
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesAdditional,
modesIndex, regWrites);
if (AR_SREV_9330(ah))
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesAdditional, 1, regWrites);
if (AR_SREV_9340(ah) && !ah->is_clk_25mhz)
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesAdditional_40M, 1, regWrites);
if (AR_SREV_9480(ah))
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->ini_BTCOEX_MAX_TXPWR, 1);
ah->modes_index = modesIndex;
ar9003_hw_override_ini(ah);
ar9003_hw_set_channel_regs(ah, chan);
ar9003_hw_set_chain_masks(ah, ah->rxchainmask, ah->txchainmask);
ath9k_hw_apply_txpower(ah, chan);
if (AR_SREV_9480(ah)) {
if (REG_READ_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TX_IQCAL_CONTROL_0,
AR_PHY_TX_IQCAL_CONTROL_0_ENABLE_TXIQ_CAL))
ah->enabled_cals |= TX_IQ_CAL;
else
ah->enabled_cals &= ~TX_IQ_CAL;
if (REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_CL_CAL_CTL) & AR_PHY_CL_CAL_ENABLE)
ah->enabled_cals |= TX_CL_CAL;
else
ah->enabled_cals &= ~TX_CL_CAL;
}
return 0;
}
static void ar9003_hw_set_rfmode(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
u32 rfMode = 0;
if (chan == NULL)
return;
rfMode |= (IS_CHAN_B(chan) || IS_CHAN_G(chan))
? AR_PHY_MODE_DYNAMIC : AR_PHY_MODE_OFDM;
if (IS_CHAN_A_FAST_CLOCK(ah, chan))
rfMode |= (AR_PHY_MODE_DYNAMIC | AR_PHY_MODE_DYN_CCK_DISABLE);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_MODE, rfMode);
}
static void ar9003_hw_mark_phy_inactive(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_ACTIVE, AR_PHY_ACTIVE_DIS);
}
static void ar9003_hw_set_delta_slope(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan)
{
u32 coef_scaled, ds_coef_exp, ds_coef_man;
u32 clockMhzScaled = 0x64000000;
struct chan_centers centers;
/*
* half and quarter rate can divide the scaled clock by 2 or 4
* scale for selected channel bandwidth
*/
if (IS_CHAN_HALF_RATE(chan))
clockMhzScaled = clockMhzScaled >> 1;
else if (IS_CHAN_QUARTER_RATE(chan))
clockMhzScaled = clockMhzScaled >> 2;
/*
* ALGO -> coef = 1e8/fcarrier*fclock/40;
* scaled coef to provide precision for this floating calculation
*/
ath9k_hw_get_channel_centers(ah, chan, &centers);
coef_scaled = clockMhzScaled / centers.synth_center;
ath9k_hw_get_delta_slope_vals(ah, coef_scaled, &ds_coef_man,
&ds_coef_exp);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING3,
AR_PHY_TIMING3_DSC_MAN, ds_coef_man);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING3,
AR_PHY_TIMING3_DSC_EXP, ds_coef_exp);
/*
* For Short GI,
* scaled coeff is 9/10 that of normal coeff
*/
coef_scaled = (9 * coef_scaled) / 10;
ath9k_hw_get_delta_slope_vals(ah, coef_scaled, &ds_coef_man,
&ds_coef_exp);
/* for short gi */
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SGI_DELTA,
AR_PHY_SGI_DSC_MAN, ds_coef_man);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SGI_DELTA,
AR_PHY_SGI_DSC_EXP, ds_coef_exp);
}
static bool ar9003_hw_rfbus_req(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_RFBUS_REQ, AR_PHY_RFBUS_REQ_EN);
return ath9k_hw_wait(ah, AR_PHY_RFBUS_GRANT, AR_PHY_RFBUS_GRANT_EN,
AR_PHY_RFBUS_GRANT_EN, AH_WAIT_TIMEOUT);
}
/*
* Wait for the frequency synth to settle (synth goes on via PHY_ACTIVE_EN).
* Read the phy active delay register. Value is in 100ns increments.
*/
static void ar9003_hw_rfbus_done(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
u32 synthDelay = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_RX_DELAY) & AR_PHY_RX_DELAY_DELAY;
if (IS_CHAN_B(ah->curchan))
synthDelay = (4 * synthDelay) / 22;
else
synthDelay /= 10;
udelay(synthDelay + BASE_ACTIVATE_DELAY);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_RFBUS_REQ, 0);
}
static bool ar9003_hw_ani_control(struct ath_hw *ah,
enum ath9k_ani_cmd cmd, int param)
{
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(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 12:33:45 +08:00
struct ath9k_channel *chan = ah->curchan;
struct ar5416AniState *aniState = &chan->ani;
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 12:33:45 +08:00
s32 value, value2;
switch (cmd & ah->ani_function) {
case ATH9K_ANI_OFDM_WEAK_SIGNAL_DETECTION:{
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 12:33:45 +08:00
/*
* on == 1 means ofdm weak signal detection is ON
* on == 1 is the default, for less noise immunity
*
* on == 0 means ofdm weak signal detection is OFF
* on == 0 means more noise imm
*/
u32 on = param ? 1 : 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 12:33:45 +08:00
/*
* make register setting for default
* (weak sig detect ON) come from INI file
*/
int m1ThreshLow = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m1ThreshLow : m1ThreshLow_off;
int m2ThreshLow = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m2ThreshLow : m2ThreshLow_off;
int m1Thresh = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m1Thresh : m1Thresh_off;
int m2Thresh = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m2Thresh : m2Thresh_off;
int m2CountThr = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m2CountThr : m2CountThr_off;
int m2CountThrLow = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m2CountThrLow : m2CountThrLow_off;
int m1ThreshLowExt = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m1ThreshLowExt : m1ThreshLowExt_off;
int m2ThreshLowExt = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m2ThreshLowExt : m2ThreshLowExt_off;
int m1ThreshExt = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m1ThreshExt : m1ThreshExt_off;
int m2ThreshExt = on ?
aniState->iniDef.m2ThreshExt : m2ThreshExt_off;
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW,
AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW_M1_THRESH_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 12:33:45 +08:00
m1ThreshLow);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW,
AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW_M2_THRESH_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 12:33:45 +08:00
m2ThreshLow);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
AR_PHY_SFCORR_M1_THRESH, m1Thresh);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
AR_PHY_SFCORR_M2_THRESH, m2Thresh);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
AR_PHY_SFCORR_M2COUNT_THR, m2CountThr);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW,
AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW_M2COUNT_THR_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 12:33:45 +08:00
m2CountThrLow);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_M1_THRESH_LOW, m1ThreshLowExt);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_M2_THRESH_LOW, m2ThreshLowExt);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_M1_THRESH, m1ThreshExt);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_M2_THRESH, m2ThreshExt);
if (on)
REG_SET_BIT(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW,
AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW_USE_SELF_CORR_LOW);
else
REG_CLR_BIT(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW,
AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW_USE_SELF_CORR_LOW);
if (!on != aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff) {
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"** ch %d: ofdm weak signal: %s=>%s\n",
chan->channel,
!aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff ?
"on" : "off",
on ? "on" : "off");
if (on)
ah->stats.ast_ani_ofdmon++;
else
ah->stats.ast_ani_ofdmoff++;
aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff = !on;
}
break;
}
case ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL:{
u32 level = param;
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 12:33:45 +08:00
if (level >= ARRAY_SIZE(firstep_table)) {
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LEVEL: level out of range (%u > %zu)\n",
level, ARRAY_SIZE(firstep_table));
return false;
}
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 12:33:45 +08:00
/*
* make register setting relative to default
* from INI file & cap value
*/
value = firstep_table[level] -
firstep_table[ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LVL_NEW] +
aniState->iniDef.firstep;
if (value < ATH9K_SIG_FIRSTEP_SETTING_MIN)
value = ATH9K_SIG_FIRSTEP_SETTING_MIN;
if (value > ATH9K_SIG_FIRSTEP_SETTING_MAX)
value = ATH9K_SIG_FIRSTEP_SETTING_MAX;
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_FIND_SIG,
AR_PHY_FIND_SIG_FIRSTEP,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
value);
/*
* we need to set first step low register too
* make register setting relative to default
* from INI file & cap value
*/
value2 = firstep_table[level] -
firstep_table[ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LVL_NEW] +
aniState->iniDef.firstepLow;
if (value2 < ATH9K_SIG_FIRSTEP_SETTING_MIN)
value2 = ATH9K_SIG_FIRSTEP_SETTING_MIN;
if (value2 > ATH9K_SIG_FIRSTEP_SETTING_MAX)
value2 = ATH9K_SIG_FIRSTEP_SETTING_MAX;
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_FIND_SIG_LOW,
AR_PHY_FIND_SIG_LOW_FIRSTEP_LOW, value2);
if (level != aniState->firstepLevel) {
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"** ch %d: level %d=>%d[def:%d] firstep[level]=%d ini=%d\n",
chan->channel,
aniState->firstepLevel,
level,
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LVL_NEW,
value,
aniState->iniDef.firstep);
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"** ch %d: level %d=>%d[def:%d] firstep_low[level]=%d ini=%d\n",
chan->channel,
aniState->firstepLevel,
level,
ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LVL_NEW,
value2,
aniState->iniDef.firstepLow);
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 12:33:45 +08:00
if (level > aniState->firstepLevel)
ah->stats.ast_ani_stepup++;
else if (level < aniState->firstepLevel)
ah->stats.ast_ani_stepdown++;
aniState->firstepLevel = level;
}
break;
}
case ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL:{
u32 level = param;
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 12:33:45 +08:00
if (level >= ARRAY_SIZE(cycpwrThr1_table)) {
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNITY_LEVEL: level out of range (%u > %zu)\n",
level, ARRAY_SIZE(cycpwrThr1_table));
return false;
}
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 12:33:45 +08:00
/*
* make register setting relative to default
* from INI file & cap value
*/
value = cycpwrThr1_table[level] -
cycpwrThr1_table[ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNE_LVL_NEW] +
aniState->iniDef.cycpwrThr1;
if (value < ATH9K_SIG_SPUR_IMM_SETTING_MIN)
value = ATH9K_SIG_SPUR_IMM_SETTING_MIN;
if (value > ATH9K_SIG_SPUR_IMM_SETTING_MAX)
value = ATH9K_SIG_SPUR_IMM_SETTING_MAX;
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_TIMING5,
AR_PHY_TIMING5_CYCPWR_THR1,
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 12:33:45 +08:00
value);
/*
* set AR_PHY_EXT_CCA for extension channel
* make register setting relative to default
* from INI file & cap value
*/
value2 = cycpwrThr1_table[level] -
cycpwrThr1_table[ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNE_LVL_NEW] +
aniState->iniDef.cycpwrThr1Ext;
if (value2 < ATH9K_SIG_SPUR_IMM_SETTING_MIN)
value2 = ATH9K_SIG_SPUR_IMM_SETTING_MIN;
if (value2 > ATH9K_SIG_SPUR_IMM_SETTING_MAX)
value2 = ATH9K_SIG_SPUR_IMM_SETTING_MAX;
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_EXT_CCA,
AR_PHY_EXT_CYCPWR_THR1, value2);
if (level != aniState->spurImmunityLevel) {
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"** ch %d: level %d=>%d[def:%d] cycpwrThr1[level]=%d ini=%d\n",
chan->channel,
aniState->spurImmunityLevel,
level,
ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNE_LVL_NEW,
value,
aniState->iniDef.cycpwrThr1);
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"** ch %d: level %d=>%d[def:%d] cycpwrThr1Ext[level]=%d ini=%d\n",
chan->channel,
aniState->spurImmunityLevel,
level,
ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNE_LVL_NEW,
value2,
aniState->iniDef.cycpwrThr1Ext);
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 12:33:45 +08:00
if (level > aniState->spurImmunityLevel)
ah->stats.ast_ani_spurup++;
else if (level < aniState->spurImmunityLevel)
ah->stats.ast_ani_spurdown++;
aniState->spurImmunityLevel = level;
}
break;
}
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 12:33:45 +08:00
case ATH9K_ANI_MRC_CCK:{
/*
* is_on == 1 means MRC CCK ON (default, less noise imm)
* is_on == 0 means MRC CCK is OFF (more noise imm)
*/
bool is_on = param ? 1 : 0;
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_MRC_CCK_CTRL,
AR_PHY_MRC_CCK_ENABLE, is_on);
REG_RMW_FIELD(ah, AR_PHY_MRC_CCK_CTRL,
AR_PHY_MRC_CCK_MUX_REG, is_on);
if (!is_on != aniState->mrcCCKOff) {
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"** ch %d: MRC CCK: %s=>%s\n",
chan->channel,
!aniState->mrcCCKOff ? "on" : "off",
is_on ? "on" : "off");
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 12:33:45 +08:00
if (is_on)
ah->stats.ast_ani_ccklow++;
else
ah->stats.ast_ani_cckhigh++;
aniState->mrcCCKOff = !is_on;
}
break;
}
case ATH9K_ANI_PRESENT:
break;
default:
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI, "invalid cmd %u\n", cmd);
return false;
}
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"ANI parameters: SI=%d, ofdmWS=%s FS=%d MRCcck=%s listenTime=%d ofdmErrs=%d cckErrs=%d\n",
aniState->spurImmunityLevel,
!aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff ? "on" : "off",
aniState->firstepLevel,
!aniState->mrcCCKOff ? "on" : "off",
aniState->listenTime,
aniState->ofdmPhyErrCount,
aniState->cckPhyErrCount);
return true;
}
static void ar9003_hw_do_getnf(struct ath_hw *ah,
int16_t nfarray[NUM_NF_READINGS])
{
#define AR_PHY_CH_MINCCA_PWR 0x1FF00000
#define AR_PHY_CH_MINCCA_PWR_S 20
#define AR_PHY_CH_EXT_MINCCA_PWR 0x01FF0000
#define AR_PHY_CH_EXT_MINCCA_PWR_S 16
int16_t nf;
int i;
for (i = 0; i < AR9300_MAX_CHAINS; i++) {
if (ah->rxchainmask & BIT(i)) {
nf = MS(REG_READ(ah, ah->nf_regs[i]),
AR_PHY_CH_MINCCA_PWR);
nfarray[i] = sign_extend32(nf, 8);
if (IS_CHAN_HT40(ah->curchan)) {
u8 ext_idx = AR9300_MAX_CHAINS + i;
nf = MS(REG_READ(ah, ah->nf_regs[ext_idx]),
AR_PHY_CH_EXT_MINCCA_PWR);
nfarray[ext_idx] = sign_extend32(nf, 8);
}
}
}
}
static void ar9003_hw_set_nf_limits(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
ah->nf_2g.max = AR_PHY_CCA_MAX_GOOD_VAL_9300_2GHZ;
ah->nf_2g.min = AR_PHY_CCA_MIN_GOOD_VAL_9300_2GHZ;
if (AR_SREV_9330(ah))
ah->nf_2g.nominal = AR_PHY_CCA_NOM_VAL_9330_2GHZ;
else
ah->nf_2g.nominal = AR_PHY_CCA_NOM_VAL_9300_2GHZ;
ah->nf_5g.max = AR_PHY_CCA_MAX_GOOD_VAL_9300_5GHZ;
ah->nf_5g.min = AR_PHY_CCA_MIN_GOOD_VAL_9300_5GHZ;
ah->nf_5g.nominal = AR_PHY_CCA_NOM_VAL_9300_5GHZ;
}
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 12:33:45 +08:00
/*
* Initialize the ANI register values with default (ini) values.
* This routine is called during a (full) hardware reset after
* all the registers are initialised from the INI.
*/
static void ar9003_hw_ani_cache_ini_regs(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ar5416AniState *aniState;
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
struct ath9k_channel *chan = ah->curchan;
struct ath9k_ani_default *iniDef;
u32 val;
aniState = &ah->curchan->ani;
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 12:33:45 +08:00
iniDef = &aniState->iniDef;
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_ANI,
"ver %d.%d opmode %u chan %d Mhz/0x%x\n",
ah->hw_version.macVersion,
ah->hw_version.macRev,
ah->opmode,
chan->channel,
chan->channelFlags);
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 12:33:45 +08:00
val = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR);
iniDef->m1Thresh = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_M1_THRESH);
iniDef->m2Thresh = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_M2_THRESH);
iniDef->m2CountThr = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_M2COUNT_THR);
val = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW);
iniDef->m1ThreshLow = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW_M1_THRESH_LOW);
iniDef->m2ThreshLow = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW_M2_THRESH_LOW);
iniDef->m2CountThrLow = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_LOW_M2COUNT_THR_LOW);
val = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT);
iniDef->m1ThreshExt = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_M1_THRESH);
iniDef->m2ThreshExt = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_M2_THRESH);
iniDef->m1ThreshLowExt = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_M1_THRESH_LOW);
iniDef->m2ThreshLowExt = MS(val, AR_PHY_SFCORR_EXT_M2_THRESH_LOW);
iniDef->firstep = REG_READ_FIELD(ah,
AR_PHY_FIND_SIG,
AR_PHY_FIND_SIG_FIRSTEP);
iniDef->firstepLow = REG_READ_FIELD(ah,
AR_PHY_FIND_SIG_LOW,
AR_PHY_FIND_SIG_LOW_FIRSTEP_LOW);
iniDef->cycpwrThr1 = REG_READ_FIELD(ah,
AR_PHY_TIMING5,
AR_PHY_TIMING5_CYCPWR_THR1);
iniDef->cycpwrThr1Ext = REG_READ_FIELD(ah,
AR_PHY_EXT_CCA,
AR_PHY_EXT_CYCPWR_THR1);
/* these levels just got reset to defaults by the INI */
aniState->spurImmunityLevel = ATH9K_ANI_SPUR_IMMUNE_LVL_NEW;
aniState->firstepLevel = ATH9K_ANI_FIRSTEP_LVL_NEW;
aniState->ofdmWeakSigDetectOff = !ATH9K_ANI_USE_OFDM_WEAK_SIG;
aniState->mrcCCKOff = !ATH9K_ANI_ENABLE_MRC_CCK;
}
static void ar9003_hw_set_radar_params(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath_hw_radar_conf *conf)
{
u32 radar_0 = 0, radar_1 = 0;
if (!conf) {
REG_CLR_BIT(ah, AR_PHY_RADAR_0, AR_PHY_RADAR_0_ENA);
return;
}
radar_0 |= AR_PHY_RADAR_0_ENA | AR_PHY_RADAR_0_FFT_ENA;
radar_0 |= SM(conf->fir_power, AR_PHY_RADAR_0_FIRPWR);
radar_0 |= SM(conf->radar_rssi, AR_PHY_RADAR_0_RRSSI);
radar_0 |= SM(conf->pulse_height, AR_PHY_RADAR_0_HEIGHT);
radar_0 |= SM(conf->pulse_rssi, AR_PHY_RADAR_0_PRSSI);
radar_0 |= SM(conf->pulse_inband, AR_PHY_RADAR_0_INBAND);
radar_1 |= AR_PHY_RADAR_1_MAX_RRSSI;
radar_1 |= AR_PHY_RADAR_1_BLOCK_CHECK;
radar_1 |= SM(conf->pulse_maxlen, AR_PHY_RADAR_1_MAXLEN);
radar_1 |= SM(conf->pulse_inband_step, AR_PHY_RADAR_1_RELSTEP_THRESH);
radar_1 |= SM(conf->radar_inband, AR_PHY_RADAR_1_RELPWR_THRESH);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_RADAR_0, radar_0);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_RADAR_1, radar_1);
if (conf->ext_channel)
REG_SET_BIT(ah, AR_PHY_RADAR_EXT, AR_PHY_RADAR_EXT_ENA);
else
REG_CLR_BIT(ah, AR_PHY_RADAR_EXT, AR_PHY_RADAR_EXT_ENA);
}
static void ar9003_hw_set_radar_conf(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath_hw_radar_conf *conf = &ah->radar_conf;
conf->fir_power = -28;
conf->radar_rssi = 0;
conf->pulse_height = 10;
conf->pulse_rssi = 24;
conf->pulse_inband = 8;
conf->pulse_maxlen = 255;
conf->pulse_inband_step = 12;
conf->radar_inband = 8;
}
static void ar9003_hw_antdiv_comb_conf_get(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath_hw_antcomb_conf *antconf)
{
u32 regval;
regval = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_MC_GAIN_CTRL);
antconf->main_lna_conf = (regval & AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_MAIN_LNACONF) >>
AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_MAIN_LNACONF_S;
antconf->alt_lna_conf = (regval & AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_ALT_LNACONF) >>
AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_ALT_LNACONF_S;
antconf->fast_div_bias = (regval & AR_PHY_9485_ANT_FAST_DIV_BIAS) >>
AR_PHY_9485_ANT_FAST_DIV_BIAS_S;
if (AR_SREV_9330_11(ah)) {
antconf->lna1_lna2_delta = -9;
antconf->div_group = 1;
} else if (AR_SREV_9485(ah)) {
antconf->lna1_lna2_delta = -9;
antconf->div_group = 2;
} else {
antconf->lna1_lna2_delta = -3;
antconf->div_group = 0;
}
}
static void ar9003_hw_antdiv_comb_conf_set(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath_hw_antcomb_conf *antconf)
{
u32 regval;
regval = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_MC_GAIN_CTRL);
regval &= ~(AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_MAIN_LNACONF |
AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_ALT_LNACONF |
AR_PHY_9485_ANT_FAST_DIV_BIAS |
AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_MAIN_GAINTB |
AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_ALT_GAINTB);
regval |= ((antconf->main_lna_conf <<
AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_MAIN_LNACONF_S)
& AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_MAIN_LNACONF);
regval |= ((antconf->alt_lna_conf << AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_ALT_LNACONF_S)
& AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_ALT_LNACONF);
regval |= ((antconf->fast_div_bias << AR_PHY_9485_ANT_FAST_DIV_BIAS_S)
& AR_PHY_9485_ANT_FAST_DIV_BIAS);
regval |= ((antconf->main_gaintb << AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_MAIN_GAINTB_S)
& AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_MAIN_GAINTB);
regval |= ((antconf->alt_gaintb << AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_ALT_GAINTB_S)
& AR_PHY_9485_ANT_DIV_ALT_GAINTB);
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_MC_GAIN_CTRL, regval);
}
static int ar9003_hw_fast_chan_change(struct ath_hw *ah,
struct ath9k_channel *chan,
u8 *ini_reloaded)
{
unsigned int regWrites = 0;
u32 modesIndex;
switch (chan->chanmode) {
case CHANNEL_A:
case CHANNEL_A_HT20:
modesIndex = 1;
break;
case CHANNEL_A_HT40PLUS:
case CHANNEL_A_HT40MINUS:
modesIndex = 2;
break;
case CHANNEL_G:
case CHANNEL_G_HT20:
case CHANNEL_B:
modesIndex = 4;
break;
case CHANNEL_G_HT40PLUS:
case CHANNEL_G_HT40MINUS:
modesIndex = 3;
break;
default:
return -EINVAL;
}
if (modesIndex == ah->modes_index) {
*ini_reloaded = false;
goto set_rfmode;
}
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->iniSOC[ATH_INI_POST], modesIndex);
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->iniMac[ATH_INI_POST], modesIndex);
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->iniBB[ATH_INI_POST], modesIndex);
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah, &ah->iniRadio[ATH_INI_POST], modesIndex);
if (AR_SREV_9480_20(ah))
ar9003_hw_prog_ini(ah,
&ah->ini_radio_post_sys2ant,
modesIndex);
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesTxGain, modesIndex, regWrites);
/*
* For 5GHz channels requiring Fast Clock, apply
* different modal values.
*/
if (IS_CHAN_A_FAST_CLOCK(ah, chan))
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesAdditional, modesIndex, regWrites);
if (AR_SREV_9330(ah))
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesAdditional, 1, regWrites);
if (AR_SREV_9340(ah) && !ah->is_clk_25mhz)
REG_WRITE_ARRAY(&ah->iniModesAdditional_40M, 1, regWrites);
ah->modes_index = modesIndex;
*ini_reloaded = true;
set_rfmode:
ar9003_hw_set_rfmode(ah, chan);
return 0;
}
void ar9003_hw_attach_phy_ops(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);
ath9k: Use static const Using static const generally increases object text and decreases data size. It also generally decreases overall object size. text data bss dec hex filename 11161 56 2136 13353 3429 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_paprd.o.new 11167 56 2136 13359 342f drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_paprd.o.old 15428 56 3056 18540 486c drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_4k.o.old 15451 56 3056 18563 4883 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_4k.o.new 14087 56 2560 16703 413f drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_9287.o.old 14036 56 2560 16652 410c drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_9287.o.new 10041 56 2384 12481 30c1 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ani.o.new 10088 56 2384 12528 30f0 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ani.o.old 9316 1580 2304 13200 3390 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/htc_drv_init.o.new 9316 1580 2304 13200 3390 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/htc_drv_init.o.old 16483 56 3432 19971 4e03 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_phy.o.new 16517 56 3432 20005 4e25 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_phy.o.old 18221 104 2960 21285 5325 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/rc.o.old 18203 104 2960 21267 5313 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/rc.o.new 19985 56 4288 24329 5f09 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_def.o.new 20040 56 4288 24384 5f40 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/eeprom_def.o.old 23997 56 4984 29037 716d drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar5008_phy.o.old 23846 56 4984 28886 70d6 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar5008_phy.o.new 24285 56 3184 27525 6b85 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_eeprom.o.old 24101 56 3184 27341 6acd drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_eeprom.o.new 6834 56 1032 7922 1ef2 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9002_phy.o.old 6780 56 1032 7868 1ebc drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9002_phy.o.new 36211 64 8624 44899 af63 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/hw.o.new 36401 64 8624 45089 b021 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/hw.o.old 9281 56 1496 10833 2a51 drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_calib.o.old 9150 56 1496 10702 29ce drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath9k/ar9003_calib.o.new Use ARRAY_SIZE instead of a magic number. Signed-off-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
2010-11-21 10:38:53 +08:00
static const u32 ar9300_cca_regs[6] = {
AR_PHY_CCA_0,
AR_PHY_CCA_1,
AR_PHY_CCA_2,
AR_PHY_EXT_CCA,
AR_PHY_EXT_CCA_1,
AR_PHY_EXT_CCA_2,
};
priv_ops->rf_set_freq = ar9003_hw_set_channel;
priv_ops->spur_mitigate_freq = ar9003_hw_spur_mitigate;
priv_ops->compute_pll_control = ar9003_hw_compute_pll_control;
priv_ops->set_channel_regs = ar9003_hw_set_channel_regs;
priv_ops->init_bb = ar9003_hw_init_bb;
priv_ops->process_ini = ar9003_hw_process_ini;
priv_ops->set_rfmode = ar9003_hw_set_rfmode;
priv_ops->mark_phy_inactive = ar9003_hw_mark_phy_inactive;
priv_ops->set_delta_slope = ar9003_hw_set_delta_slope;
priv_ops->rfbus_req = ar9003_hw_rfbus_req;
priv_ops->rfbus_done = ar9003_hw_rfbus_done;
priv_ops->ani_control = ar9003_hw_ani_control;
priv_ops->do_getnf = ar9003_hw_do_getnf;
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 12:33:45 +08:00
priv_ops->ani_cache_ini_regs = ar9003_hw_ani_cache_ini_regs;
priv_ops->set_radar_params = ar9003_hw_set_radar_params;
priv_ops->fast_chan_change = ar9003_hw_fast_chan_change;
ops->antdiv_comb_conf_get = ar9003_hw_antdiv_comb_conf_get;
ops->antdiv_comb_conf_set = ar9003_hw_antdiv_comb_conf_set;
ar9003_hw_set_nf_limits(ah);
ar9003_hw_set_radar_conf(ah);
memcpy(ah->nf_regs, ar9300_cca_regs, sizeof(ah->nf_regs));
}
void ar9003_hw_bb_watchdog_config(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
u32 idle_tmo_ms = ah->bb_watchdog_timeout_ms;
u32 val, idle_count;
if (!idle_tmo_ms) {
/* disable IRQ, disable chip-reset for BB panic */
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_2,
REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_2) &
~(AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_RST_ENABLE |
AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_IRQ_ENABLE));
/* disable watchdog in non-IDLE mode, disable in IDLE mode */
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_1,
REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_1) &
~(AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_NON_IDLE_ENABLE |
AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_IDLE_ENABLE));
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_RESET, "Disabled BB Watchdog\n");
return;
}
/* enable IRQ, disable chip-reset for BB watchdog */
val = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_2) & AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CNTL2_MASK;
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_2,
(val | AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_IRQ_ENABLE) &
~AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_RST_ENABLE);
/* bound limit to 10 secs */
if (idle_tmo_ms > 10000)
idle_tmo_ms = 10000;
/*
* The time unit for watchdog event is 2^15 44/88MHz cycles.
*
* For HT20 we have a time unit of 2^15/44 MHz = .74 ms per tick
* For HT40 we have a time unit of 2^15/88 MHz = .37 ms per tick
*
* Given we use fast clock now in 5 GHz, these time units should
* be common for both 2 GHz and 5 GHz.
*/
idle_count = (100 * idle_tmo_ms) / 74;
if (ah->curchan && IS_CHAN_HT40(ah->curchan))
idle_count = (100 * idle_tmo_ms) / 37;
/*
* enable watchdog in non-IDLE mode, disable in IDLE mode,
* set idle time-out.
*/
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_1,
AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_NON_IDLE_ENABLE |
AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_IDLE_MASK |
(AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_NON_IDLE_MASK & (idle_count << 2)));
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_RESET,
"Enabled BB Watchdog timeout (%u ms)\n",
idle_tmo_ms);
}
void ar9003_hw_bb_watchdog_read(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
/*
* we want to avoid printing in ISR context so we save the
* watchdog status to be printed later in bottom half context.
*/
ah->bb_watchdog_last_status = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_STATUS);
/*
* the watchdog timer should reset on status read but to be sure
* sure we write 0 to the watchdog status bit.
*/
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_STATUS,
ah->bb_watchdog_last_status & ~AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_STATUS_CLR);
}
void ar9003_hw_bb_watchdog_dbg_info(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
struct ath_common *common = ath9k_hw_common(ah);
u32 status;
if (likely(!(common->debug_mask & ATH_DBG_RESET)))
return;
status = ah->bb_watchdog_last_status;
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_RESET,
"\n==== BB update: BB status=0x%08x ====\n", status);
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_RESET,
"** BB state: wd=%u det=%u rdar=%u rOFDM=%d rCCK=%u tOFDM=%u tCCK=%u agc=%u src=%u **\n",
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_INFO),
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_DET_HANG),
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_RADAR_SM),
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_RX_OFDM_SM),
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_RX_CCK_SM),
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_TX_OFDM_SM),
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_TX_CCK_SM),
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_AGC_SM),
MS(status, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_SRCH_SM));
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_RESET,
"** BB WD cntl: cntl1=0x%08x cntl2=0x%08x **\n",
REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_1),
REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_CTL_2));
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_RESET,
"** BB mode: BB_gen_controls=0x%08x **\n",
REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_GEN_CTRL));
#define PCT(_field) (common->cc_survey._field * 100 / common->cc_survey.cycles)
if (common->cc_survey.cycles)
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_RESET,
"** BB busy times: rx_clear=%d%%, rx_frame=%d%%, tx_frame=%d%% **\n",
PCT(rx_busy), PCT(rx_frame), PCT(tx_frame));
ath_dbg(common, ATH_DBG_RESET,
"==== BB update: done ====\n\n");
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(ar9003_hw_bb_watchdog_dbg_info);
void ar9003_hw_disable_phy_restart(struct ath_hw *ah)
{
u32 val;
/* While receiving unsupported rate frame rx state machine
* gets into a state 0xb and if phy_restart happens in that
* state, BB would go hang. If RXSM is in 0xb state after
* first bb panic, ensure to disable the phy_restart.
*/
if (!((MS(ah->bb_watchdog_last_status,
AR_PHY_WATCHDOG_RX_OFDM_SM) == 0xb) ||
ah->bb_hang_rx_ofdm))
return;
ah->bb_hang_rx_ofdm = true;
val = REG_READ(ah, AR_PHY_RESTART);
val &= ~AR_PHY_RESTART_ENA;
REG_WRITE(ah, AR_PHY_RESTART, val);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(ar9003_hw_disable_phy_restart);